Author: Jack

Jack’s January-March 2020 Fiction Favorites!

Hey y’all, I’m Jack, a bookseller at Lemuria Books! Here at the store, we’re working hard behind the scenes to help our community stay reading by processing web and phone orders, and by using the internet and social media as tools to help you find the great books you deserve. It’s a difficult and trying time in our world, and self-quarantining and social distancing have not been easy, but at Lemuria, we’re doing what we can to make the most of this time by reading and recommending fantastic books. It’s also been a challenging time to be a passionate bookseller; 2020 has provided so many incredible books, and at Lemuria we believe in the value of face-to-face bookselling and the experience of real books, but in the meantime we are closed for browsing. Thus, we have worked tirelessly to adapt to these times by increasing our web and social media presence and by utilizing those platforms to help you find great books. In our newsletter, we have been featuring books from different sections in our store, handpicked by our wonderful booksellers, and we’d love to help you find great books from Lemuria with staff-specific favorites, as well. So, to kick things off, I’ve included some of my favorite Fiction Picks from 2020 so far, with small blurbs attached. You Deserve a Good Book, and We’d Love to Help! Thank you for supporting our store and community by keeping Lemuria alive and well during these crazy times! 

Apeirogon

Fortunately, before we closed our doors to the public, we hosted an outstanding event with Colum McCann for his new novel Apeirogon. Spending time with McCann, Lemurians, and our awesome reading community that night was one of the highlights of my time here at the store. McCann and Katy Simpson Smith hosted a really awesome conversation about the book and about fiction as a way to reach a more distinct truth in our society today. It was inspiring, fun and important to the store and to our readers. I’m really grateful to have been a part of it. 

Apeirogon is a very powerful book centered around two fathers on either side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict who connect through their mutual grief over the loss of their daughters to meaningless war terrorism incidents. Told through 1001 cantos, McCann’s novel dissects the complexities of the conflict between two nations and peoples by utilizing an innovative and highly appropriate form. These vignettes blend and disorient, contribute and connect to one another, and the overall result is nothing short of a masterpiece. This novel made me feel loved, taken into consideration as a reader, and showed me the side of fiction that makes me want to read and sell books forever: fiction that grips the heart of experiential and emotional truth. Reading this novel affected me deeply, and that experience was reinforced by McCann’s authentic and curious persona when he came to visit Lemuria. I’ll always remember it. 

Verge is a clever, abrasive collection of stories by Lidia Yuknavitch, an author whose ingenuity and mastery of the short story form should be celebrated. Yuknavitch’s insightful representation of life as a woman in today’s America is conveyed in each of these appropriately brutal fictions. Her commentary on consumerism, addiction, sex and making mistakes as part of one’s path toward some sort of fully-developed identity gives the reader a sense of forgiveness and self-love. This book is really fantastic, and I’m so happy I was afforded the opportunity to read it when I read it; this is the kind of book that finds you at the right time. 

Lily King’s novel is important for 2020. Writers and Lovers tells the story of a struggling young woman, Casey Peabody, seeking to establish her identity, place and voice in both the book industry and in America in the midst of grieving the loss of her mother. Partly autobiographical, King’s novel gives an enlightening account of what it means to still be struggling into adulthood as a lone, independent woman in a man’s industry and world. Peabody champions her own disheveled path toward truth and identity in writing and loving, holding steadfast to the deeper dreams she has harbored her whole life, even when it is much easier to let those fall away and fold into an easier way of life. This book has a really universal quality that I haven’t felt from something in a while, and I think Lily King’s voice is invaluable to American fiction today. 

Like Flies From Afar is Argentinian author K. Ferrari’s brutally honest and expletive-ridden murder mystery, translated and published by Farrar, Strauss and Giroux in 2020. FSG is an imprint I’ve been tuned to in the recent past, and I have yet to be disappointed by anything of theirs that I’ve taken a chance on, this novel no exception. Like Flies From Afar follows Luis Machi, a delusional Argentinian oligarch fueled by machismo and his cocaine habit, through a downward spiral of paranoia that threatens to dissolve his guise of masculinity. When Machi finds the dead body of an unidentifiable man in the trunk of his spotless BMW, he is forced to confront the realities of the dirty and drug-driven life and identity he has built around himself. What impressed me most about this novel was Ferrari’s ability to delineate the awful behaviors and attitudes of men with absurd levels of unchecked power and status. His commentary on materialism and how we identify with what we have had me thinking for weeks after I read this. FSG2020 rocks! 

Alexis Schaitkin’s brilliant debut, Saint X, is far more than a murder mystery or a typical beach-read thriller, though it definitely does both of those justice. This novel, though centered around the death of a young girl, is much more an exploration into race, class, privilege, status, wealth and position in America and specifically, in New York. Beautifully written, Saint X is told from the perspectives of all of those surrounding the murder of Claire Thomas, and Schaitkin is able to believably show and tell each of these characters impressively well. Each first person account and perspective blends into the next; and though these narrators come from far different backgrounds, their mutual telling of the story provides some central truth and understanding. Schaitkin’s unique style comes across incredibly well-realized, and it’s hard to believe this is her debut novel. I can’t wait to read what’s next from her, and if you pick this one up, you’ll feel the same way. 

Nguyen Phan Que Mai’s powerful family saga, The Mountains Sing, is told across multiple generations within a North Vietnamese family during the 20th century, before, during and after the Vietnam war. A grandmother and her granddaughter serve as the protagonists here, recounting their firsthand experiences of hardships incited by war and imperialism, known all too well by the North Vietnamese. Mai’s prose is pure, authentic and moving, genuine and simple in the best ways. The Mountains Sing offers the invaluable perspective of life lived during a war that has been so misconstrued and misunderstood by Americans since it happened. These characters’ accounts seem vital to the conversation around the Vietnam War, and I’m so fortunate to have read this book and to be able to show it to friends and family. It’s seriously beautiful and important; it’s for everyone. 

What struck me early on in Deacon King Kong was its similarity in style and prose to Barry Gifford’s Southern Nights and John Kennedy Toole’s classic, A Confederacy of Dunces. I love the way McBride writes; his dialogue and characters are both completely believable and hilarious. Deacon King Kong follows the aftermath of a shooting in a 1960s Brooklyn, NY project called the Cause House — it is captivating and humorous in its most basic forms, but on a deeper level achieves real insight into the history of those who inhabited New York during the 1960s. These are the kinds of characters that follow you around, ones that you’ll nostalgically reflect on from time to time, as if you have real memories of having spent time with them. In a way, I feel like I have spent real time with them, and I’m thankful to have had the opportunity to read this book for that experience alone. You’re in good hands with James McBride!

Thanks for reading, and thank you for supporting our bookstore. Give us a call at 601-366-7619 for any questions or to buy any of these awesome books! We love you!

Viv Albertine’s ‘To Throw Away Unopened’ should not be put away, unread

Many musicians who decide to become authors after their long and boisterous music careers usually sell books based on their reputations as musicians alone. As a reader and an avid music listener, I am drawn to the memoirs of musicians that I listen to the most or that I have a preconceived notion of. This is usually because I am interested in learning about these musician’s lives outside of how they portray themselves through the music they make. However, my introduction to former musician Viv Albertine was not through her music with her legendary punk band The Slits, but rather was the result of reading her fantastic new memoir To Throw Away Unopened.

I had read about Albertine as a feminist influence to many of my favorite female-led, Pacific Northwest bands like Bikini Kill, Sleater Kinney, and Dear Nora, but I really didn’t know who she was. But when I happened upon her new memoir, I decided to give it a try. After that, there was no turning back.

The former punk-rocker holds nothing back in this memoir built around her life after divorce, surviving cancer, and living the day to day life as a musician. I was immediately drawn to her painfully dry and honest writing style as she delineated the realities of failed relationships, dating as an older woman, surviving cancer, and having trouble raising a daughter properly after having been brought up in an objectively dysfunctional family herself. Albertine progresses through these shortcomings and lessons learned with a strikingly raw and realistic voice that is hard to deny. Eventually, the story centers around the death of her beloved mother Kath, who raised both Albertine and her sister Pascale after the departure of their foul-playing father Lucien.

Albertine’s attempt to overcome the death of her mother revolves around her trying to understand the childhood she experienced and the rocky split between her parents in the 1960s. Her search for those answers gets interesting when she finds the diaries of both of her parents, one found in a bag marked “To Throw Away Unopened.” Instead of doing so, Albertine wields these journals as weapons in her struggle to understand the truth of her past. With these descriptive and sometimes clashing new accounts of her parents’ failing marriage and family life, Albertine begins to piece together a more accurate version of the truth she experienced as a child, and many of her questions begin to be answered.

What unfolds after the story of her youth begins to unravel is a compelling and quick read about the realities of life that people often choose to ignore. Albertine puts those emotional parts of her life on display, and the result is an extremely relatable and honest memoir written for those who wouldn’t throw the bag away unopened. If you fit yourself into that category, I highly suggest picking up a copy of this beautifully compelling memoir.

Get to Know Jack

How long have you worked at Lemuria?

I’ve worked at Lemuria for 2 months now (I think)! It’s been a thrilling journey with all my new pals!

What do you do at Lemuria? 

At Lemuria, I’m the special main desk guy who accidentally gets called ma’am all of the time because of my long hair, and I’m in charge of the travel section! I think it would be fun to be more involved with the music books at the store, in order to sell more of those and to broaden my knowledge of music that way.

get to know jack

Talk to us what you’re reading right now.

Right now I’m finishing up Viv Albertine’s memoir To Throw Away Unopened, which comes out in May. It’s fantastic. She has a really honest and compelling voice that I think stems from her becoming an author later in life, and I have really enjoyed that. I’ve also barely gotten into Tom Rubython’s recent biography about Barry White (White Music), but I’m excited to pick that back up when I’m finished with the Albertine book.

What’s currently on your bedside table (book purgatory)?

Unfortunately, I’m pretty bad at leaving books unfinished on my bedside table (which I think is probably a common trait amongst Lemurians), so right now my stack is pretty high. There’s Geronimo Rex by Barry Hannah, Absolutely on Music by Haruki Murakami, The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin, and a few more. I would love to press pause on the world for about a week and just finish all the books that are living in that purgatory, but I’m not sure that will happen.

How many books do you usually read at a time?

I try to finish a book before I start another one, but working at Lemuria has really made that difficult because of all the wonderful things people have suggested I read, both past and present. So sometimes I’ll be reading a few at a time because Katie or someone will tell me that I HAVE to read this or that, and I’m pretty easy to persuade in that way.

I know it’s difficult, but give us your current top five books.

This is a really difficult question, but in no particular order I would say these are my top 5 favorite books that I’ve read thus far in my short time here on earth:

  • The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
  • Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
  • Seymour: An Introduction by J.D. Salinger
  • The Pastures of Heaven by John Steinbeck
  • The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

Favorite authors?

Faulkner, Steinbeck, Hemingway and other classics are hard to beat for me, but I also really love the more contemporary novels I’ve been reading since I started working at Lemuria. And I really enjoy the contemporary female authors I’ve read lately as well (like Jesmyn Ward, Banana Yoshimoto, etc.)

Any particular genre that you’re especially in love with?

I’m a sucker for anything that’s emotionally powerful or artistically inspirational in some way, and a lot of books that have greatly impacted me have probably been the ones that weren’t intentionally made for those purposes. I appreciate honesty and authors that write because they have something to say, and books that carry a heavy message around that you remember and think back on for a long time afterward. And I really enjoy reading weird, avant-garde works of fiction, but the books that have ended up being my favorite are simpler novels that convey the human experience in a powerful way.

What did you do before you worked at Lemuria?

Before I worked at Lemuria, I was going to school at Loyola University New Orleans and playing a lot of music with a lot of wonderful people. I decided to transfer to Millsaps this fall and be closer to home because Jackson, Mississippi is a magnet that I just can’t stay away from for long or I get out of wack.

If you could share lasagna with any author, dead or alive, who would it be? What would you ask them?

I would love to gobble down some lasagna with John Kennedy Toole, so I could tell him how amazing I think Confederacy of Dunces is. His story is tragic and I want to give him a big hug and thank him for that book.

Why do you like working at Lemuria?

I like working at Lemuria because I love that sweet, sweet Lemuria book smell I get everyday when I walk in Oz. I love being around this great group of booksellers and listening to John’s favorite R&B hitmakers on a daily basis. The thing I love most about working here though is how much I learn both from the intelligent, beautiful people around me and from the books I’ve read.

If Lemuria could have ANY pet (mythical or real), what do you think it should be?

I think we should have a little mini Austen Jennings rabbit that bounces around and plays mischievous pranks on people around the store all day for my sole enjoyment.

If you had the ability to teleport, where would you go first?

I think if I could teleport anywhere in the world I would go to Big Sur and backpack with some of my good friends who are there right now doing just that. That sounds fun.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén