Category: Southern Culture (Page 8 of 16)

A Call for Posts Celebrating Governor William Winter

William F WinterLemuria would like to invite Mississippians, friends, family and/or admirers to write personal remembrances and observations about former Mississippi Governor William Winter.  The blog series is in honor of the University Press of Mississippi’s publication of the biography William F. Winter and the New Mississippi by Charles C. Bolton. 

We would love you to share any personal anecdotes or reflections on how the Governor’s advocacy for public education and racial reconciliation has influenced you.   Photos are welcome as well.

Please keep your entries to no longer than 500 words and we reserve the right to edit if needed.

Email entries to Maggie at maggiel@lemuriabooks.com

Charles C. Bolton and Governor William Winter will be signing at Lemuria on October 9 at 5 pm and reading at 6 pm

The Storied South by Bill Ferris

mississippi folk voices

In 1973, about the time that I found the como fife and drum corp, I discovered the work of Bill Ferris. Bill’s LP, Mississippi Folk Voices,  features tracks of Napoleon Strickland and his como band, Sam Chatmon, the Prisoners from Parchman, and others. At that time, Bill’s vinyl anthology was a gold mine for young listeners learning about Mississippi’s cultural heritage. A 55-page book came along to help study his research.

William_Ferris_filming @ Bill Ferris

When I think of Bill Ferris “hero” is the first word that comes to my mind. His lifetime of exploring, experiencing, interpreting and then sharing our culture is epic. When I mention great Mississippians of my generation, Bill Ferris’s contributions rank near the top.

Left: Bill Ferris filming by Hester Magnuson, The Storied South @ Copyright 2013.

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charles reagan wilson and william ferrisOver the years I have had occasions to work with Bill selling his fine books. Twenty-five years ago opening his Encyclopedia of Southern Culture at Hal and Mal’s was a Southern Nostalgic Blast. However, when I did a book signing for Bill’s Mule Book at the Jim Buck Ross Ag Center “Mule Pull” gathering with Bill riding a mule in the center ring, waving to the crowd is my most talked about Ferris memory.

Lemuria is proud to announce Bill’s new book, The Storied South, as a special First Editions Club selection for August. To have Bill as a new member of our heralded line of First Edition Club authors is a great honor for us. We acknowledge not just his fine book but his lifetime of literary contribution.

storied southBill’s ability to relate the creative legacies of his friends through conversation is unparalleled. With Bill’s relaxing interview skills, these folks come alive, and the reader is brought into the room and is spoken to directly and intimately. In this way The Storied South is a unique and enjoyable book.

Also special with this First Editions Club choice is the inclusion of Bill’s jacket photo and the opening section with our own Eudora Welty. First Editions Club started in 1993 and Miss Welty’s work was never included. Her last Lemuria public book signing was when Morgana came out. Eudora signed with Mildred Nungster Wolfe (illustrator) but in consideration of Miss Welty’s arthritis we chose never to ask for her signature again. Mildred and Eudora pictured below.

mildred nungster wolfe and eudora welty

Now with Bill’s new interview in book form I feel Miss Welty is now also included in our club. Bill’s interpretive genius comes through with Eudora’s chat (or essay). For me, reading her words, I feel this body of work could be included as an epilogue to her beloved One Writer’s Beginnings.

So with all this being said, Lemuria is happy to celebrate jointly with the work of our two Mississippi heroes. Also, thrown in are the marvelous interviews with Robert Penn Warren, Margaret Walker Alexander, Alex Haley, and many more.

For desert, another Lemuria hero, Jackson’s own–and one-of-a-kind–Bobby Rush. And for your after dinner drink, Bill’s Storied South comes with a CD and DVD.

Bill Ferris will be at Lemuria Saturday, August 24 at 4:00 for a signing and talk to follow.

The Storied South: Voices of Writers and Artists by William Ferris, University of North Carolina Press, 2013. If you’d like us to ship you a copy, click here. Or give us a call and we’ll reserve a copy for you: 601.366.7619

The “Hemphill Girls” of the Mississippi HIll Country

rosaleehillThese ladies, Rosa Lee Hill, Jessie Mae Hemphill, and Ada Mae Anderson, come from a long line of musicians.  They were all taught to play by their father and or grandfather.  When George Mitchell arrived in Mississippi he was introduced to Rosa Lee and her niece, Jessie Mae at Fred McDowell’s house.  He couldn’t believe he was meeting Rosa Lee Hill and asked if he could record her.  She tells him not tonight but then invites him to her house in a few days and maybe then.

Rosa Lee Hill was born in Panola County in 1911 and her father was Sid Hemphill.  Sid was a popular  jessiemaehemphillbrooksmusician in the Senatobia area.  He played every night to make money for his family and taught all of them to play too.  Rosa Lee began playing guitar at age seven and was  playing parties with other family members by the age of ten.  Jessie Mae was Rosa Lee’s sisters child and as soon as she was old enough was taught to play guitar by her grandfather, Sid.  She soon though started to beat the snare drum with some of the Fife and Drum bands that played at the picnics around the area.  Ada Mae Anderson was the daughter of Sid’s brother, George Hemphill,  she played with the Hemphill clan when she was young but also sang in a female gospel band.  Jessie Mae is probably the most well known of the adamaeanderson“Hemphill Girls” having collaborated on many albums and touring Europe and being featured in the documentary Deep Blues.  There is no doubt that the Hemphill Clan was an important and vital part of the history of the MS Hill Country Music history.

 

 

For your listening pleasure…Rosa Lee Hill singing Bullying Well.  This was recorded in Como, MS in 1967.

 

 

Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr. “The Southern Imagination”

Our friend David McCarty shared this on Facebook yesterday and I just thought this was too cool not to share on the blog as well.

Eudora Welty gets quite a laugh.

Don’t forget Bill Ferris will be here on Saturday, August 24 at 4:00 to sign and talk about his new book The Storied South which features interviews from Eudora Welty, Alice Walker, Ernest Gaines, Alex Haley, Margaret Walker, Robert Penn Warren, and Sterling Brown plus many other artists, painters and musicians including Bobby Rush.

Othar Turner

 

otharturnerWhile Othar Turner was born in Rankin County, MS in 1907 he lived the majority of his life in Gravel Springs near to Como and Senatobia.  He grew up going to fife and drum gatherings and by watching other players he soon learned how to build and blow a cane fife of his own.  He often was seen playing drums with Napoleon Strickland’s band and when he was too ill to play Turner started his own band.  Turner upheld the tradition of the fife and drum until his death in 2003.  Sharde Thomas, Othar Turners granddaughter, was 12 years old when he passed away.  She took up the fife blowing in the Rising Star Fife and Drum Corps and continues to do so.

This is what Othar Turner says about how he learned to play music…

I started on a tin tub. Beat it with sticks. Take my hand and beat that drum and take me some sticks and went to doing just what the next fellow doing.  Practiced and practiced till I got my right lick.  Not just pecking on the drum, you got to play tunes on the drum.  That’s right. So I learned ’em.  I started playing on the tin tub when I was fifteen years old, and when I started playing the drum, I was seventeen.

And I learnt myself to blow the fice {fife}.

So I got me a cane and got me a nail.  Just plain cane.  Started to boring my holes; I couldn’t make none out of that.  so I went and got me a thick piece of wire and put in the stove to  burn the holes in there.  My mama then come: “Get out of the way, boy! What you doing?” I said, “I”m trying to make me a fice.”  “Oh, you ain’t going make you no fice. You don’t know how to make a fice.”  I said, ” Mama, I’m going make me a fice. I’m going learn how to blow this cane.” I learnt.

Othar Turner’s Rising Star Fife & Drum band (Turner, fife; G.D. Young, bass drum; E.P. Burton, snare; Eddie Ware, snare) playing a picnic at Othar’s farm. Shot by Alan Lomax, John Bishop, and Worth Long in Gravel Springs, Mississippi, August 1978.

Mississippi Fred McDowell

fredmcdowellWhile Fred McDowell was born in Tennessee, he lived most of his life in Como, Mississippi.  He is considered one of the ‘elder statesmen’ of the Hill Country and during the 60’s was the most well known outside of the area.  He began playing guitar at a young age for picnics and house parties and in 1959 Alan Lomax recorded him.  While he did play an electric guitar, McDowell always insisted that “I do not play no rock n’ roll.”  He passed away in 1972 just a few years after meeting George Mitchell.

When George Mitchell decided to make the trip to MS he called some friends for some leads to go about finding these “unknown” blues musicians.  He was given Fred McDowell’s name and told that he lived somewhere around Como.  He and his wife, Cathy, headed south hit I-55 and took Exit 52 and pulled into a Stuckeys to get some gas. George decides to ask the attendant if he knows McDowell and he says yes….

Do you know where I can find him? I ask.

You’re looking at him.

I’m taken aback. The first man we meet in Mississippi is Fred McDowell?! Damn! And he works in a service station?!

Mitchell tells McDowell what they are doing in MS, that they want to interview and record some unkown blues musicians from the area and Fred says that shouldn’t be a problem.  He then invites them to his house where he promises to have some folks for them to meet.  The rest as they say is history.

Mississippi Fred McDowell—Going Down to the River

If These Poems made Music, They Might Sound like the Blues, by Whitney Gilchrist

oxfordReading the Spring’s Oxford American, our copies of which are now signed by Jamie Quatro, I am reminded that there is no better way to feel warm and fuzzy about the South. In the editor’s note, Roger Hodge introduces a new a magazine section: Points South. Vignettes, overheards, all approachable and oh-so-Southern. After those comes, graciously framed by white space, a poem.

I first heard Sandra Beasley read a couple of years ago at Millsaps College. She was candid about her work, cheerful, and young with covetable awards behind her name. She had written books of poetry and a memoir about food allergies, a stereotypically whiny topic that she reframed as something lovely and human and very funny. And she is, if you will, Southern.

Sometimes, I think, my generation of Southerners loses our roots among what feel like dishonest or archaic portrayals of the culture of which we are a part. Which is what I love about what this magazine, and Beasley’s poem “King of Mississippi”: they reframe things in a Southern perspective that is very true to my experience of Southness. For my generation, I think, art is community and let poetry ne’er be forgotten just because it is quiet. Read real Southerners.

“Among the kings

the one-eyed man goes blind. Don’t get too close,

his gut growls. What a man hungers to love

 

makes him a bear. What he bears makes him king.”

by Whitney

Variations on the City of the Heart: LITTLE BLACK DAYDREAM by Steve Kistulentz

Steve Kistulentz has been my professor of creative writing at Millsaps College and advisor in many capacities. I am delighted to share my thoughts on his hot-off-the-press new book of poetry, Little Black Daydream. Since beginning work in the bookstore, I all too frequently find books that sound interesting, but do not impart enough new information or meet a level of artistic integrity that qualify the long form and price tag of the book. Everything I blog about meets my personal standards for what should constitute a “book,” is really great, and my brilliant teacher’s newest work is no exception.

I can’t remember a time when I read something with a title so true to the spirit of this book. The interior of a person who has lived vastly and quickly gets unwound and shivers before us as we read Kistulentz’s poems. Like an unwinding ball of yarn, colors fade in and out, pale guilt and dark mourning, frosty inspiration distilled as a walk through streets, and the warm and delightful song of a child “eating, then asking for more.”

Prose readers, don’t dismiss this poetry. The forms are minimal; they instruct the meaning of the poems without being scary or overly academic. And the voice is responsibly concise, too. The book is full of wonderful phrases like “the blundering sax” and the title “Poem That Wishes It Could Touch Your Face.”

This is one of my personal favorites:

The Bungalow Club

For the holiday, imagine my hands scraping away the dead glaze
of fifty-year-old windows, prying up the loose floorboards still marked
by the rings of a brass bed where no one slept. In return I will think
of you peeling cucumbers in the exact manner of my grandmother,
making a fame of it, as the long shoelaces of kelp-green skin
flutter to the bottom of the sink, leaving your whole kitchen
smelling astringent and clean. Once you are finished, the day
will give way to the temptations of gin and a dreamless sleep
I wish I could invade, if only because it’s too much to think
of us in the same kitchen, the coordinated dance of cooking,
our fingers pressing  greasy delights, filling each other’s mouths.
It turns out that to want what I want is almost a requirement,
that middle age means learning how I once was Shiva,
all these houses I destroyed and rebuilt, a farmhouse, a condo,
now a bungalow. The foundation lists to starboard, and the sound
of home is the clatter of paws against oak and the chance
to read a new poem each night before bed, a dream I thought
as transient as the steam rising from a plate of child’s pasta
in three varieties, elbows, curls, and stars. It turns out I was wrong
about all these things. I did not even know what music meant,
that song was my daughter eating, then asking for more.

All the poems, whatever they are about, carry the same sacredness with which this poem describes the quiet and beautiful and tiny world of a family and somehow connects it with “how I once was Shiva.” The same voice tells us about the failings of a mythological political structure, about longing for a lover, about the bitterness of a luckless generation, and about the redemption of a child’s plate of pasta.

These poems are personal and exploratory and reflective, but they are also vivid. Poems take place in landscapes like the waiting room at the Bureau of Metropolitan Longing, a place where there are, unsurprisingly, lots of “homeless.” The first poem gives us the private life of the narrator in the bedroom of his childhood, and we are gracefully transported from safety to the terrifying Bureau, among other places. Hyperreal landscapes constantly borrow from contemporary American reality, challenging the reader about how unrealistic and unrelated are these sometimes scary and sad faraway unrealities from our daily lives.

There are certain things that are so true to the human experience that they can only be articulated in an unreal landscape—a landscape of hyperterror, hyperhonesty, and hypertight hand-holding. It is reminiscent of the days following the loss of a friend, when the everydayness means nothing and the meaning of human relationships is all that makes sense. Each poem in this book accomplishes this on its own, and the book as a whole does the work of a novel in its characterizing of a person’s trek through days weighted by human longing.

The work of a poet is to flip the awareness switch regularly. To tap into collective truths and report back to us. We have all read poems that seem to do their work, but don’t reach us in their reporting of the human news. But the poems in Little Black Daydream really reach us. They are modern; they are sad and delightful; they are triumphant in each small mission to share something important.

Death Is a Hysterical Dynasty

Tonight we shall read from my personal book of lamentations,
sit shiva in a room lit with those overly perfumed candles as thick
as the aluminum bat I used just last week to flip away the possum
caracass I’d found collapsed against the house. Forensics tells us
the backyard is Panama before quinine, an ecosystem
unto itself, civil war of mongoose, snake, and cat. The cause
of the possum’s death was obvious, this near-biblical dryness
that lasted the summer. This morning I found a carapace,
a palmetto bug in my shower, dead in his search for water.
He got flushed, a Viking funeral; minutes later I heard about
Rocky, 48, complications from a ruptured aortic aneurysm,
who went the same week as John, 47, though by less violent means.
I’d never introduced either to my family, and now I am covering
the mirrors. Pictures from a decade ago exist without context,
the bars in them closed, marriages shattered on the pebbly coast
of installment debt, bands broken up by midnight arguments
dead men can’t recall. Forgive us out trespasses, yes, but also
this literalism. Let us frame the only surviving picture of the three
of us in a rectangle of thorns before we take communion
out in the street. I will let those candles burn, burn, burn,
burn, burn to the wick. Barracuda, then tell you how
I would have laid down my life for either of those two men,
and I have nothing to offer now they have done that for me.

There will be a signing and reading at 5:00 & 5:30 on this Tuesday, October 23 at Lemuria. Kistulentz is also the author of The Luckless Age, Red Hen Press, $16.95.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Little Black Daydream, University of Akron Press, $14.95

by Whitney

Walt Grayson’s Got Competition: Looking Back Mississippi by Forrest Lamar Cooper

This year’s Looking Around Mississippi has been replaced by Looking Back Mississippi by Forrest Lamar Cooper. Cooper’s name did not ring a bell for me but you may have been reading his columns in Mississippi Magazine on history and culture for the past thirty years. Looking Back Mississippi is a sampling of some of Cooper’s best columns.

Once I had the chance to sit down with Looking Back Mississippi, I was delighted. My favorite history lesson so far is on Koscuisko, Mississippi–the town with the funny name that I think everyone knows the Mississippi pronunciation is a long way from accurate. Not being a native Mississippian, that’s about all I knew about the town.

Coming from a district in Polish Lithuania in the 1700s, Tadeusz Andrzei Bonawentura Kosciuszko’s (correctly pronounced Kosh-CHOOSH-ko) name was “Americanized” after living in Philadelphia for several years into its current pronunciation as we know it in Mississippi. But did you know that Tadeusz Kosciuszko was what we might call an overachiever?

Here are few of Koscuisko’s high points: he was a natural leader educated at a top military school in Warsaw during the 1700s; studied engineering and architecture in France; fell in love with one of his students and nearly was killed by her wealthy father; landed in America in 1776 and before long he had laid out defenses in Philadelphia; transformed the defenses at West Point into the “American Gibraltar”; used his pension to buy the freedom for as many slaves as possible. Kosciuiszko’s remarkable, “Brave and True” story, as Cooper titles it, goes on. What an honor it is to have part of his history in Mississippi.

Enjoy the rest of Kosciusko’s story at your leisure, reading through the rest of the stories and photographs in Looking Back Mississippi. The entire text is complimented by beautiful old postcards from the towns and places Cooper writes about. Cooper has an amazing collection of over 10,000 postcards of towns and places in pre-1920’s Mississippi.

The titles of each story may or may not have the name of the town in it. I was searching and searching to find the story about Kosciusko again after I read it the first time. The title “Brave and True” I could not remember. After reading several other stories, including stories about Corinth, Mize and the Citrus of the Gulf coast, I found that these vague titles encouraged me to read about places I was not naturally drawn to read. It was a pleasure. Though I am reluctant to say it yet, the holidays are coming. This book would make a lovely gift.

Join us on Tuesday, October 18th for a signing and reading with Forrest Lamar Cooper at 5:00 and 5:30.

Looking Back Mississippi is published by The University Press of Mississippi, 2011.

Hiking Mississippi

Hiking and Mississippi are not the first two words I would put together. However, after spending a good deal of time hiking in the North Carolina mountains, I began to long for the benefits of hiking closer to home. While Mississippi doesn’t have near the inclines, I have been learning in Helen McGinnis’s book, Hiking Mississippi, that there are many challenging and beautiful hikes to be had in our very own state.

Did you know that there are over 1 million acres of federal land designated as six national forests in Mississippi? In these national forests, there are 276 miles of hiking trails and 21 developed campgrounds and picnic areas. Most of this land has been recovering since the 1930s after being stripped of all its virgin trees. It was “Roosevelt’s Tree Army” who replanted the trees and established recreational areas for us to enjoy.

Author Helen McGinnis has hiked nearly every trail she writes about in her book. Much of the writing makes you feel like you have your very own trail leader. She points you to places you have never heard of and provides interesting tidbits of history rarely told. For example, she points out the little known Old Trace Trail, a pleasant 3.5 mile walk, which is not marked on the official Natchez Trace Parkway map:

“It is the wildest trail along the Parkway–crossed by no roads and out of sight from vehicles. The spell is broken only at the northern end, where the Trace passes along the edge of a large recent clearcut on private land.”

All of these details, historical notes and trail maps will certainly whet your appetite for a hike in Mississippi, but I would urge you to have a state atlas handy to get the bigger picture as you prepare for your hike. It also may be helpful to contact the National Forest office in the area for the most up-to-date information.

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