Category: Uncategorized (Page 4 of 4)

A Painted House by John Grisham

painted house UPNew York: Random House, 2001.

If you spend too much time wandering around bookstores, you may come across a plain looking version of a book labeled uncorrected proof or advanced reader copy. Despite their generic appearance, the original intent of these editions is to help generate buzz around a book before the book even goes on sale. Advanced copies may be sent to news media, book reviewers, book sellers, and librarians. For these professionals, advance copies may pile up in the desks rather quickly and unthinkingly. If a book becomes a great success, however, an uncorrected proof or advance copy can become highly sought after by collectors. One reason is that such a limited number of advanced copies were printed and another reason is that the proof may differ slightly from the final publication.

Someone who collects uncorrected proofs reveals a particular connection to an author, his or her story, or that time in publication history. Here are some examples of proofs that have become collectible over the years: In Cold Blood by Truman Capote (1965), Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez (1988), and Lancelot by Walker Percy (1977). It takes a keener eye to look out for more contemporary proofs like the debut of A Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger (2003) or A Painted House by John Grisham. Released in 2001, a proof of Grisham’s Painted House is significant in that it was his first work outside the legal thriller genre, a coming-of-age story set in rural Arkansas likely influenced by the writing style of Willie Morris. Finding the proofs signed or getting them signed renders them rare indeed.

The Third Life of Grange Copeland by Alice Walker

third life of grange copeland by ALICE WALKERHarcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, Inc. 1970.

We collect books not so much as objects but as mementos of a particular time in our lives, a philosophy that opened our eyes, a history we do not want to forget. Alice Walker wrote her first novel, The Third Life of Grange Copeland, in a room of her own in Jackson, Mississippi as a way to honor her family’s determination to build lives of dignity. Around the time of publication of The Third Life, Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye were also released. Morrison and Walker would go on to win the Pulitzer while Angelou would be nominated.

Alice Walker came to Mississippi in 1966 to support the freedom movement. She collected depositions from Greenwood sharecroppers thrown off the land for attempting to vote. She discovered the poetry of Margaret Walker and eventually covered Dr. Walker’s leave of absence from Jackson State University. She also taught literature and writing at Tougaloo College and wrote a second novel, Meridian, from her home in Jackson. She fell in love, she married, she had a child. Walker’s marriage to Mel Leventhal was the first legal interracial marriage in Mississippi. While Walker worked, Leventhal risked his life as a lawyer deconstructing Jim Crow. In 2008, Walker reflected on her time in Mississippi at the Third Annual Gathering of Veterans of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement in conjunction with Jackson State University:

“I saw the best of human beings in Mississippi. They were black and they were white. They were young and they were old. They were women and they were men. They were children who sacrificed childhood so that future generations might enjoy it. Mississippi, in its vanguard position of struggle in the Southern black freedom movement, was a fierce, challenging, loving, rageful mother and father to my spirit. My debt for what I learned of human courage and possibility can never be paid with less than my understanding that I must never, given our people’s beauty, endurance, trust in each other, and grace, give up.”

The Queer South

St. Paddy’s Day Parade… Float Building!!

A few pictures of the Krewe of Kids Who Can’t Read That Good and Want to learn to do other things good too… 
Float Building… (In a secret location off Mill St.)


Page 4 of 4

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén