Category: Newsworthy (Page 7 of 30)

Secrets, secrets are no fun

Today we are celebrating the release of Matthew Guinn’s novel The Resurrectionist in paperback! When I started working at Lemuria it was the very first book I read with the intention of selling it- so it had to ask myself not only how I felt about it but how I thought others would react to the story. It is a book of secrets. There are two kinds of secret: those that grow over time and those that diminish. The secrets that grow over time are not the big ones, not the powerful or horrible ones- they are the ones that people share in whispers at night until they grow into the daylight like weeds. Just ask the people working at UMMC, they’ll tell you it’s not so easy to erase a secret that hundreds of people know about.

The Resurrectionist does what we all wish would happen more often, it tells us the real back-story of a painful and embarrassing secret. Jumping between present day and the 19th century, Matt Guinn tells an amazing story on both sides of a dark history of a hospital that has to bend their morality to try to save lives. It begs the question: have we really changed as much as we pretend in the public eye; or is it the things we do behind closed doors that measure our progress? I’m certain I don’t know the answer- all I know is secrets and coincidences go hand in hand, so I leave you with a quote I read last night: “That is how heavy a secret can become. It can make blood flow easier than ink.” -Patrick Rothfuss, The Wise Man’s Fear 

The keg is on ice and the man of the hour will start signing at 5PM. Free Dead Guy Ale. Come share a secret with us.

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Let’s Talk Jackson: Marshall Ramsey reviews “Jackson”

The following article was written by Marshall Ramsey and was published on August 2, 2014 in the Clarion-Ledger

JACKSON LAMAR

(Photo: “Jackson” book cover )

After a recent cartoon I drew about Jackson, a caller asked me, “Why should I care about Jackson?” I should have sent him Ken Murphy’s new book “Jackson” (Lemuria Books, 2014).

For 15 years, photographer Murphy has captured Mississippi’s beauty with his camera. In “Jackson,” he not only chronicles the interesting landmarks but tells the colorful story of its people as well.

It takes you on a tour without having to start your car.

Start in the lobby of Lemuria Books. Buckle up and read the foreword by owner John Evans and then read Jacksonian Leland Speed’s introduction. Then let your journey begin.

Head downtown and see Jackson’s historic City Hall. Then cruise over to the Governor’s Mansion and the Mississippi Old Capitol. By now you’ll notice how this book is different: These aren’t just postcard photos of buildings. The streets are teeming with paradegoers from Mal’s St. Paddy’s Parade. You not only see the city’s beauty: You feel its pulse.

Keep turning the pages. You’re taken geographically and historically through the city. Medgar Evers home (you see the driveway where he was gunned down) sits next to the William F. Winter Archives & History building. A winding road carries you into Greenwood Cemetery where you’ll stop in front of Eudora Welty’s grave. See Eddie Cotton’s performance at Duling Hall. On the next page are legends Bobby Rush and Jesse Robinson. Jackson’s musical roots run deep. All your senses are engaged visually now. You can almost smell the magnolias in Belhaven and hear the cheers at a Jackson State football game.

Hungry? Stop at Two Sisters Kitchen, Parlor Market, The Mayflower, The Elite or one of Jackson’s other fantastic restaurants. Or just pick up some fresh vegetables at the Farmer’s Market. Thirsty? Pull up a stool at Hal & Mals. You can almost hear writer Willie Morris holding court. Walk into the men’s room and see the tribute to Elvis. Head up State Street. See Fondren rise like a phoenix. Isn’t that Governor Winter’s home? Sure. He just happens to be standing in front of it.

Your tour continues, and you sit in Welty’s den and see her writing room. The warmth of the light in the photograph matches the power of her prose. Then you can step into one of Jackson’s art galleries to marvel at the talent that emanates from the city. See Jackson’s houses of worship and institutions of higher education. Take a stroll on a path near the Pearl River and see how close wildlife is to city life. Head to the State Capitol and see where the political sausage is made. Bored? Catch a festival. Go to a museum. Listen to a concert. Go to the Mississippi State Fair. The sun is going down? No problem. The photos and fun continue. Some of Murphy’s most compelling images are the ones taken at night.

Now you’re at the finish line — the Blues Marathon & Half Marathon finish line. Cross it and sit back, relax and read the plate details. It’s when Jackson’s history comes to life. “Jackson” broadened my knowledge of the city where I’ve worked in for nearly two decades.

Murphy and Lemuria Books have given us a book that deepens our knowledge and appreciation of a complex, interesting city. The city of Jackson should be celebrated. And “Jackson” does it well.

Marshall Ramsey, a two-time Pulitzer finalist, is a nationally syndicated editorial cartoonist, author, speaker and Mississippi Public Broadcasting radio host. He has drawn cartoons in Jackson for The Clarion-Ledger since 1996.

“Jackson”

• Photographs by Ken Murphy

• Foreword by John Evans

Publisher: Lemuria Bookstore

Pages: 183

Price: $75

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com. 

Houses in Jane Austen’s Life and Fiction

The Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA)–Mississippi Region is excited to host Iris Lutz, President of JASNA, the weekend of September 6-8th. The Mississippi Region of JASNA is less than two years old, but has already been recognized by the national organization for its quick buildup of membership (over 30 members across the state), interesting events (academic classes, tea parties, films and discussions), scholarship (articles by members in JASNA’s prestigious journal Persuasions), and unique Jane Austen-inspired products (t-shirts, notecards, bookmarks, earrings, and Christmas ornaments). Ms. Lutz ‘s visit is a wonderful recognition of our new region.

Ms. Lutz will be making her keynote presentation in the Ellen Douglas Meeting Room at the Eudora Welty Library on Sunday afternoon. Ms. Lutz’s powerpoint presentation is entitled “Houses in Jane Austen’s Life and Fiction.” This illustrated talk on houses in Jane Austen’s real and imagined worlds will shed light on many of the homes and estates that figured in her life and novels. The visual tour will feature houses Austen lived in and visited while in Chawton, Bath, Winchester, and Kent. Friends of the Library will help host and provide hospitality for the event.

Ms. Lutz’s program is free and open to the public. Please join JASNA-Mississippi and Friends of the Library on Sunday, September 7th, at 2:30 at the Eudora Welty Library for this exciting event.

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Blog: Fire Hazards and Newsrooms

Jim PathFinder Ewing has written six books, published in English, French, German, Russian and Japanese. His latest is “Conscious Food: Sustainable Growing, Spiritual Eating” (Findhorn Press, 2012). His next book — about which he is mysteriously silent — is scheduled to be released in Spring, 2015. Find him on Facebook, join him on Twitter @EdiblePrayers, or see his website,www.blueskywaters.com

Looking at the photo of The Clarion-Ledger building, there’s no clue that once it had a feisty rival called the Jackson Daily News, housed in a adjacent portion of that same building. I tell people I worked for the C-L for 32 years; but in fact, the first 10 years were with the JDN, until the papers merged in 1989. Jimmy Ward hired me. Both papers were then owned by the Hederman family. JDN folk bitterly fought to scoop the C-L. We felt like stepchildren, as we were paid less, and had a smaller staff.

We were in the old YMCA building, which is now a C-L parking lot. Gannett tore down the building. The Hedermans apparently didn’t like or trust the JDN building either. The C-L was built on a heavy concrete structure — I’m told, thinking that one day they might build upwards, as a skyscraper. The JDN building was wooden and the floors creaked when anybody walked on them. The Hedermans must have thought it was a firetrap because there were only two doors linking the second floor and both had automatic shields designed to slam shut and seal the C-L building in case of fire. The JDN portion of the building was left to its own fate.

Clarion Ledger

I used to stare at those steel doors while the JDN newsroom puffed on cigarettes, reporters carelessly flipping lit butts in the direction of waste baskets overflowing with wadded up rolls of paper from the AP machine chattering nearby. Sometimes, those rolls did smolder a bit. Nobody had heard of secondhand smoke. When I started working as an editor on the JDN city desk, they gave me a key to the newsroom. When the last Jackson Daily News rolled off the press, there were only three of us editors left.

I still have that key – to a door that no longer exists.

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com. 

Oz Blog: Back-to-School Round Up

(Today in Oz, we have something for your munchkins to read.)
New backpack? Check. A new size in uniforms? Check. While your child might be leaving their summer reading until the last minute (it still FEELS like summer), here’s a list to help your kids, and yourself, get in the back-to-school spirit.

Here’s the rundown:

Pre-school to Kindergarten:
Oliver and his Alligator by Paul Schmid

Oliver has a case of the first-day-of-school jitters, and stops by the swamp to pick up an alligator who helps swallow all of his worries. Great for conquering shyness. Schmid’s ne
west book, Oliver and his Egg, features an Oliver in school whose imagination runs wild when he finds a dragon egg.

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Planet Kindergarten by Sue Ganz-Schmitt

GREAT book for boys (and even girls) entering Kindergarten. The budding astronaut found in these pages will have soon-to-be kindergarteners excited about starting school. My favorite line in the book? “Then…I remember what they say at NASA: FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION.” Illustrations by Shane Prigmore are also colorful and exciting.

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First Grade:
Pinkalicious and the New Teacher by Victoria Kann

Our favorite pink-loving heroine is back just in time for school! I’ll admit, my favorite part of this book is the fold out poster that says “Reading is Pinkatastic!” I have to agree with Pinkalicious, as she discovers the joys of a new classroom. Bookmarks with that slogan are also included.

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The Day the Crayons Quit by Drew Daywalt, Illustrated by Oliver Jeffers

Duncan’s crayons have a bone to pick with him. Yellow thinks he should be the color of the sun…but then again, so does orange. All he wants to do is color! If you do not own this book, or you have not read this book, the biggest favor you can do for yourself and your child is to purchase this hilarious read for anyone who loves to color with crayons. I’ve placed it on this back-to-school list because who doesn’t love to color??

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Rufus Goes to School by Kim T. Griswell, Illustrated by Valeri Gorbachev.

With a name like Rufus Leroy Williams III, Rufus is not your average pig. While his friends are busy playing basketball, he wants to learn how to read. The catch? The principal doesn’t allow pigs to enroll in his school. Kids will love Rufus, and will most likely be one to read again and again.

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My Teacher is a Monster! (No, I am Not.) by Peter Brown

You loved Creepy Carrots and Mr. Tiger Goes Wild. This book wins the prize for BEST BACK-TO-SCHOOL BOOK of 2014! Bobby loves to fly paper airplanes, especially in class. Ms. Kirby is Bobby’s “big problem” at school because she makes him sit out at recess for throwing paper airplanes in class. But then…Bobby runs into Ms. Kirby at the park outside of school. What happens next will make you smile. You can get a signed copy here at the store!

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The Midnight Library by Kazuno Kohara

The little librarian works all night with her three assistant owls to make sure things run smoothly in the Midnight Library. However, squirrels start to play music, and a wolf begins to cry. The library stays open until the sun rises, and the illustrations and story are charming.

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The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore by William Joyce

While we are on the topic of libraries…this incredible book is about loving stories and books, and the journey they can take you on. Great for any age, and a must have for a personal library.

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Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: Woodworth Chapel at Tougaloo College

Written by Seetha Srinivasan

Looking through Jackson: Photographs by Ken Murphy published by Lemuria Books, I was so pleased to see that Tougaloo College’s Woodworth Chapel was included in this book celebrating the city’s landmarks. So when Hannah at Lemuria Books asked if I would post an entry to blog about the book, I accepted with alacrity.

ToogalooChapel_Ext

Woodworth Chapel was built in 1901 by students, and is by far the most iconic structure on the 145-year-old Tougaloo College campus. A major renovation has restored the building to all its original beauty, and it is now on the National Register of Historic Places. As it well should be.

From its earliest days the chapel has been at the center of campus life. Notably during the turbulent sixties, Tougaloo was a haven for activists, and the chapel was the epicenter for the Jackson movement. Many a meeting was held there, and such leaders as Martin Luther King, Jr. and John Lewis spoke at the chapel. I taught English at Tougaloo from 1969 to 1977, and heard memorable speakers like Ambassador John Kenneth Galbraith and psychologist Kenneth Clark at the chapel. The chapel is often home to concerts, and after the ancient music group Boston Camerata performed there, their leader said that the group had not performed in a venue with better acoustics. Far and away my most unforgettable experience was being present for Fannie Lou Hamer’s appearance at Woodworth Chapel, as she recounted with power and passion her family’s struggles on the Eastland Plantation and then her political involvement. When she concluded by singing “Nobody Knows the Trouble I have Seen,” there was not a dry eye in the packed chapel.

ToogalooChapelInterior

When we came to Tougaloo in 1969, it was on the edge of Jackson in every sense of the word. In the early 1990’s when the college hosted a lunch for business and community leaders, the venue was filled to capacity, reflecting the changing dynamics of the city. Now with Tougaloo College’s Woodworth Chapel included in this collection of photographs paying homage to Jackson, the integration of the institution, is in a sense, complete.

Tougaloo College has a venerable place in the state’s history and culture, and it is only right that Woodworth Chapel be recognized as one of Jackson’s iconic buildings. Thank you to Ken Murphy and to John Evans for giving this stately structure its due in their beautiful book Jackson.

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com. Please join us in celebrating Jackson on August 5th at 5:00 in Banner Hall!

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: Let’s make LEGO Jackson real

Written by Scott M. Crawford, Ph.D

LEGO JACKSON started as just a fun distraction and hobby, one way to cope with my progressing disability caused by Multiple Sclerosis.  The display was originally intended to brighten my house for Christmas, but it soon became more.

I wanted to imagine what Jackson can and will be.  Before something can happen in reality, though, we must be able to visualize it, to conceptualize it happening, and finally, to WORK at it.  LEGO Jackson is just one vision of our Capital City, as a clean, safe, pedestrian friendly community that welcomes everyone.  It has well-kept houses, bike lanes, sustainable energy sources, accessible streets and sidewalks, public transit, and most important of all, civic pride.  People in LEGO Jackson don’t litter, but pick up trash.  They get to know their neighbors, confront crime and injustice, care about each other, and respect themselves and their city.

Imagine it, and it can happen.  It will take hard work though, and each of us has our part to play.  Keep our streets clean.  Take a stand against crime.  Respect your neighbors, seek cleaner forms of energy, reduce, reuse, and recycle like our Earth depends upon it.

Each year, I add an original design to LEGO JACKSON, modeled using pictures taken of an actual building.  One year I did Bailey School.  Last year I built The Standard Life Building.  This year, I’m adding a hospital complex complete with pedestrian bridge.

Seeing the looks on children’s faces as they enjoy the display makes all the work worthwhile.  I hope that by appreciating our city in miniature, we’ll learn to take care of it, and each other.

Legos best_DSC0435

LEGO JACKSON is scheduled to open Saturday, December 6th, 2014 at the Arts Center of Mississippi, 201 East Pascagoula Street.

All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them.- Walt Disney

Imagination is more important than knowledge.- Albert Einstein

Be the change you want to see in the world.- Mohandas Gandhi

Check out LEGO Jackson’s Facebook Page here!

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619 or visit us online at lemuriabooks.com. 

Millsaps Freshman Reading: Half the Sky

Written by Dr. Shelli Poe, visiting Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and director of Faith and Work at Millsaps College

In Half the Sky, Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn set out to recruit their readers “to join an incipient movement to emancipate women and fight global poverty by unlocking women’s power as economic catalysts.” Why, we might ask, are these Pulitzer Prize winning journalists spending time on issues that concern feminists? For many in America today, “feminism” is either a dirty word or refers to a movement that is now irrelevant because it has already achieved its goals: women’s right to vote, hold property, and work outside the home.

Indeed, Kristof and WuDunn admit that in the 1980s, when their project began, they didn’t consider women’s oppression a “serious issue.” The book is a result of their “journey of awakening” to the importance of women’s oppression as “one of the paramount problems of this century.” In it, they intend to set right the skewed journalistic priority for covering occasional events rather than those that occur every day, “such as the quotidian cruelties inflicted on women and girls.” I would add to this set of journalistic priorities covering stories that are of particular interest to privileged men. Generally speaking, the well-being of girls and women is not one of them. As one man who was interviewed for the book put it, “A son is an indispensable treasure, while a wife is replaceable.” Even when reporters are supposedly interested in the oppression of women, many are often not interested in the transformative work women themselves are doing, but only in their humiliating experiences of sexual assault. In one interview on CBS, a woman who had suffered sexual violence and then worked tirelessly to help other girls avoid the same was asked, “So what was it like being gang-raped? … Mukhtar indignantly replied: I don’t really want to talk about that…. There was an awkward silence.” Whether reporters and consumers of media want to pay attention, “more girls have been killed in the last fifty years, precisely because they were girls, than men were killed in all the battles of the twentieth century.” The authors do not blame men alone, but point to oppressive social customs fueled by sexism and misogyny, which are absorbed, transmitted, and “adhered to by men and women alike.”

Tragic as the stories told within its pages might be, Half the Sky is essentially a call to continued transformation. One of the genius moves of the book is to show how the empowerment of girls and women does, in fact, relate to those chief concerns of privileged men: the accumulation of wealth and status. Countries cannot afford, so the argument goes, not to educate and empower more girls and women: “Evidence has mounted that helping women can be a successful poverty-fighting strategy anywhere in the world.” In addition, “to deny women is to deprive a country of labor and talent, but—even worse—to undermine the drive to achievement of boys and men.” Likewise, publicity about the maltreatment of women can be so damaging to governmental authorities’ reputations that they take action. Even so, the book predominantly relies on creating moral outrage to rally its readers for action. Indeed, at times throughout the first half of the book its authors may be guilty of providing too detailed narratives of sexual assault, much like the CBS reporters mentioned above were fascinated by rape stories. This is the dangerous line Kristof and WuDunn must walk given their strategy for motivating their readers’ to take action and given that in some arenas, “saving women’s lives is imperative, but it is not cheap.” They propose three problems for women and their supporters across the globe to work against: “sex trafficking and forced prostitution; gender-based violence, including honor killings and mass rape; and maternal mortality.” Their proposed solutions include girls’ education, including reeducation about gender norms “so that women themselves become more assertive and demanding,” and microfinancing women’s businesses.

Half the Sky is required reading for all first-year students at Millsaps College because it incites its readers to ask questions like, How can we account for the current and historic plight of women and girls in societies across the globe? How can such accounts avoid feeding on or contributing to the culture of sexual predation that all of us have absorbed? Are tragedies like the ones recorded in the book just so many inevitabilities that ought to be met with resignation? Who, if anyone, can do something about such oppression? What are the connections between poverty, education, health care, race, class, and sex?

One of the dangers of an undisciplined reading of the book is that it might contribute to a set of narratives Westerners have told themselves about people in other nations: that they are passive peoples who need our help, that we can “free” them (in ways that will also serve our interests), that they ought to be grateful for our interventions and introductions to more “civilized” ways of living. In the past few decades, these misleading and damaging stories have been told especially about Muslim cultures and religion, which Leila Ahmed describes in her masterful and highly recommended historical analysis, Women and Gender in Islam (New Haven: Yale, 1992, see especially chapter 8). Half the Sky also serves, therefore, to raise further questions for Millsaps students like, What narratives adequately account for the history and agency of women in their religions, cultures, and nations? What does it mean to be part of an increasingly global world? What intellectual and active responsibilities do I have within that world? How can (or ought) I evaluate the beliefs, practices, and cultures of others? If it is sometimes legitimate to try to change others’ cultures, what mechanisms are most useful for such transformation—legal action, economic policies, police involvement, education, “moral support,” financial contributions, microloans, food programs, media coverage, or other measures? How should or can “outsiders” take on “supporting roles to local people,” forming an “alliance between first world and third” in a way that avoids neo-colonialism? After all, Kristof and WuDunn admit that “while empowering women is critical to overcoming poverty,… it involves tinkering with the culture, religion, and family relations of a society that we often don’t fully understand.”

Half the Sky raises ethical, racial, socio-economic, cultural, legal, sex and gender, political, religious, and economic questions that are ripe for investigation. Moreover, it challenges its readers with the claim that “sex trafficking and mass rape should no more be seen as women’s issues than slavery was a black issue or the Holocaust was a Jewish issue. These are all humanitarian concerns.” In addition to raising awareness about the continuing global oppression of women and girls, this required reading for Millsaps first-years has the potential to spark questions, reveal complexities, and ignite a passion for ethical thinking and acting that students will carry with them throughout their college careers as they become responsible local and global citizens.

Jackson Book Retailers

Stop by any of these local retailers to purchase a copy of Jackson: Photographs by Ken Murphy!

Ramey Agency

Fischer Galleries

The Crawdad Hole

Hickory Pit

Bella Ches

The Eudora Welty House

The Iron Horse Grill

The Rogue 

Mississippi Museum of Natural Science 

The Manship

The Fairview Inn

Turnrow Books 

Square Books 

Confetti Events

Let’s Talk Jackson: Why #letstalkjackson is so important!

Let’s Talk Jackson from Frascogna Entertainment Law on Vimeo.

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