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' t .Elliott, s h e wrote, was elected Miami Beach mayor by the senior citizens ("with , , the balance of power firmly held in their wrinkled• hands") even though "he'd come to the city only two • years before and his record , • — marital, military, educa- tional, occupational, finan- cial, domestic, political, and personal — was hardly a t campaign asset. Elliott is surely the only public figure , ever to be described in a • book by his fifth wife as a man 'plodding inexorably to- ;,.. • , ward ruin.'" - • For the most part, though, . • ;•. • her look is an affectionate ' 44 "I‘s't • one at the Beach and its peo- V I t . • pie — an up-beat appraisal • of an area which nobody took seriously enough to re- cord until it was full-blown. fEight • When she describes the book itself, she admits It ar only narrowly escaped being •, ,• ,•• ;•W.' II"! • t h e biography of the late „ • , Carl Fisher, who developed • ,;;; • the sand spit. a- r' "I couldn't find any maps 4.- cf. alM;.;','t of the, island, or any really -4) • •A documented information, un- :I til I found that Fisher's pa- • • • • '• ' 4,in'',f4S " • • pers were at the Historical • •- • • • Society. The only trouble • • was, they were roachy and • wet from hurricanes. It took •-• •,me two years to dry, them out, by which time my hus- band would have had grounds for divorce — I was :-4,:tutAlliE • , •, . • so involved with the image ..tv, • of this man. "Everyone who talked of him (she has given 25 tape- recorded hours of interviews 3.010 ••on the subject to the Univer- •sity of Miami Library's Flori- , • da collection) "just bubbled on about him . . . about his personal magnetism . . his enthusiasm. He was • electric!" She described him in writ- ing, nonetheless, as the free • thinking, free wheeling, alco- halls. undomesticated. disr.- .,...10101441111111PutabLe, •outrageously pope --- lar animal that he was. • - - • ' The book got its start in • r 4,4" her mind when Russel Pan- coast, one of the earliest Mi- • L.r. TE1/10te CI _az: • a m I Beach residents when that place really was just an • unglorified mosquito-ridden ' • . sandbar, gave a talk to the Coconut Grove Civic Club. f(S1 441:1 /4...1.3411" "I was fascinated with his memories," she says, "and my theory has always been , • . that the main subject that •i,grIg •k•:.ott e excites people in Florida is •: • ..• the land . . . real estate." The most animated group at a cocktail party, she main- tains, will not be telling dirty jokes but will be swapping land stories. Be that as it may, she says s h e began researching "Sandbar" even before fin- ' ishing her second book, "Christmas Bower." And she • - wasn't really cheating on her chosen subject, but she played with the peripheral ar eas too. Such as the airport, which after all brought the tourism explosion to the Beach. Describing it, she writes: "Once inside the airport, ' the new arrival finds himself in a maze of refrigerated passages smelling of kero- sene., The people are sun- . burned, and wearing the wildest array of sport and re- • sort clothes to be found any- : '4"- • where on the planets; they turn the corridors and wait- ing wog/aka/64r Wgirlfrw rooms of Miami'Interna- tional into a human zoo. "No place on earth can one see more old women dyed and painted to look like young ones, and so many young ones with no faces at all — just pancake, lipstick, • eye shadow and wigs. "No other airport has more nervous little dogs with jew- eled collars, more luscious callipygian Latinas in higher, wilder heels, more amateur photographers hung with bigger cases of useless equip.. ment. There are Puerto Rican