Year: 2010 (Page 20 of 45)

Mississippi Murder

Mississippi conjures many different images in people’s minds.  Some people think about the wonderful authors and artists from here, some think of the Civil Rights movement, some people think of The Blues, some people think of beauty queens and lately we have all been thinking about heat and humidity.  This year though we have had three books published  about MURDER!   These are murders you might not know about even though when they occurred  they were national news but they are part of  local folklore to this day in their respective counties of Attala, Holmes and Jones.

One Night of Madness by Stokes McMillan

Stokes McMillan is fourth generation born and raised in Attala County, Mississippi.  His mother had collected together his father’s photos and articles about this crime but never had a lot of interest in it until 2001 when one of his own children wanted a copy of the award winning photographs his grandfather had taken of  the capture of the two killers.  Mr. McMillan decided to also give some of the more interesting information along with the photograph.  He read over the scrapbook and realized that this was a story that deserved to be told so he wrote One Night of Madness.

It’s 1950 and Mary Ellis Harris is struggling to care for her five children by sharecropping alongside her husband who loves to drink and gamble.  One night, Leon Turner, a white man her husband drinks with, corners her in her house and refuses to take no as an answer.  He is arrested for attempted rape and when he gets out of  jail comes back for revenge on the Harris family.  The scene at the Harris house is horrific and bloody and a manhunt led by the Sheriff of Attala County, Roy Braswell, with the help of Hogjaw Mullen and his tracking dogs ends in a shootout and the arrest of Leon Turner and two accomplices.  The trial began but not only where these men on trial but the State of Mississippi itself.  The eyes of the nation where watching  and when the controversial jury decision is made the public’s outcry for punishment is heard through out the United States.

The Time of Eddie Noel by Allie Povall

Allie Povall was 12 years old in 1954 in Holmes County where the events of The Time of Eddie Noel took place.  This is the story of how a black man, Eddie Noel, shot and killed a white honky-tonk owner, Ramon Dickard.  One of the largest posses in Mississippi history was formed and they hunted Eddie Noel.  Eddie Noel killed two more white men and wounded three others before disappearing into the the woods of southwest Holmes County.  This is the story of how a black man, a three time murderer, in Mississippi could beat the lynch mob, beat the posse, beat the system and avoid almost certain death?  Eddie Noel, though he confessed to the murders was never tried or convicted and he spent the last 22 years of his life living peacefully with family in Fort Wayne, Indiana.  Allie Povall interviewed many people, read newspaper accounts and court records and relied on his own memory of this event.  This story has almost reached mythic status in Holmes County but there are still those who will not talk about it for example Eddie Noel’s family in Indiana promised his mother that they would never discuss it outside of the family.  Allie Povall has done a great job in gathering this information to tell us a story of a time in Mississippi that was full of  bootlegging and moonshine, gambling and juke joints and the time of Eddie Noel.

The Legs Murder Scandal by Hunter Cole

In 1935, Ouida Keeton is arrested in Laurel, Mississippi for the murder of her mother, Daisy Keeton.  Ouida shot her, chopped her up and disposed of the body parts by flushing them down the toilet and burning them in the fireplace.  That is all but her mother’s legs.  She tried to dispose of them on a isolated country road but they were soon found by a hunter and his dogs.  After her arrest while police were interrogating her she incriminated her wealthy business man lover, W.M. Carter.  While this murder is almost completely forgotten today, it was touted as Mississippi’s most sensational murder of the time.  Hunter Cole through researching countless trial transcripts, courthouse records, medical files and endless newspaper coverage gives detailed accounts of the separate trials of Ouida Keeton and W.M. Carter and also reveals new facts that have been distorted by hearsay and misinformation about “Mississippi’s Lizzie Borden” throughout the years.


(Re)reading

by Kelly Pickerill

Moving is painful whether you’re moving across town or across the world. I recently moved across the neighborhood, which can be the worst sort, I think, because you’re fooled into thinking you don’t have to do much preparation, just run your car back and forth a few times right? Well if you’re not organized those “few times” turn into what feels like a few hundred.

One great thing about moving for a reader, though, is that you have the opportunity to get to know your books again. Those that have been gathering dust at the back of an overflowing bookshelf are brought again to your attention, and you are reminded of what you loved so much about them. These are a few I’m (re)reading:

The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell. I read a few chapters of this classic of anthropological mythology when I first bought it several years ago, and looking at it again, I’m coming across the margin notes and underlines I mulled over then, fresh(er) out of college with an interest in comparative literature and religion.

One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I first read this beat up paperback for a class in literary theory in college. That semester ended up being too much for me, so I withdrew from the class to take it again a year later. I may have dropped it, though, just so I’d have to read the book again. One of my favorite books of all time, it too has lots of dog ears and underlines and notes from twice poring over it already. When I came to Mississippi from Florida two years ago, I didn’t bring all my books, leaving some in boxes with my family — ones I’d read or that were for school — but though I’d read it twice, One Hundred Years came with me to Mississippi because I knew I’d likely want to read it again.

Parrot and Olivier in America by Peter Carey.  Recently longlisted for the Booker prize, I’ve had a copy for months now, and now that I’ve “found” it I’m going to get started on it right away.  That, along with Eric Metaxas’s biography Bonhoeffer, are what I’m reading now. Bonhoeffer’s biography is flying off the shelves at Lemuria, and so far it’s thoroughly readable and fascinating. I’m not too familiar with Bonhoeffer’s life, other than knowing that he was executed towards the end of WW2 for his involvement in a plot to assassinate Hitler. I’m glad to find out more, and will have to keep an eye out for the theologian’s books as I unpack; I know I have a copy of the Cost of Discipleship in one of my boxes.

During the move, I read One Day, the charming British sensation by David Nicholls, which Quinn blogged about weeks ago. After long days of work followed by the physical labor of moving and cleaning, it was nice to fall asleep with Em and Dex. As I continue to unpack and organize and likely acquire several more bookcases, I know I’ll come across more books I’m thrilled to be reminded I own.

Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry

There are a lot of things to love about this bookstore: first editions in abundance, the First Editions Club, this blog is pretty cool, you can spend years investigating and getting to know the shelves, and we have some pretty awesome author events.  But I think that one of my favorite things about the store is the wealth of knowledge that walks around shelving, is busy on IBID or sits in the office. These people that work here know so much about books. I think it’s probably one of the most valuable things in the store. For most, they can help find a better book than one could alone….or at least more books and in a shorter amount of time.  Yesterday I decided I wanted to find a book that discussed the decline of small farms and the further push into the corporate run, government owned America. Since I couldn’t think of any, I thought it better to ask. I talked to Joe for about 3 minutes and even though the population of books on that subject is quite small, I found just what I was looking for.

The Art of the Commonplace is a collection of essays that offers a perspective on living that is quite different then the one that dominates our culture. It rests a greater portion of importance in being content and at peace where you are and placing effort into the soil and finding value in the crops that are harvested. He contrasts the efforts of the expanding Americans of the late 1700s with that of the native Indians. Citing the unquenchable  thirst for progress and success in even the first Americans. The essays are wonderfully written and are a pleasure to read, unlike a lot of essays that I have read that are quite rigid and blocked. I can’t wait to get deeper into this collection as I have not read Wendell Berry before and I think I am at a loss because of it. This bit is taken from the first essay “A Native Hill.”

“We still have not, in any meaningful way, arrived in America. And in spite of our great reservoir of facts and methods, in comparison to the deep earthly wisdom of established peoples we still know but little.”

His lines are full of good-thinking material because it is quite different from most anything that you hear today. I don’t follow politics really close; a lot of it strikes me as a bunch of foolishness. But I do know that it doesn’t seem that we are on course for a sustainable way of living. China seems to be a little better at the modern approach of “bigger, faster, and more of it.” I love America and I even think free market capitalism is alright, I think it is the pit of unbound greed that gets me. These essays are a pleasing insight that are a reminder that the way in which we live and our people have lived and what was thought as success for the past hundred years is not the only way people have lived and worked throughout histories and cultures.

-John P.

Moving and Reading

It’s hard to do both of those things, move and read. I am halfway through about five books right now because I will start one and then lose it in my room, only to start another one and subsequently lose it as well. So right now I am sticking with picture books, one of my all-time favorite book genres (hence the title children’s manager!).

This morning we had a great crowd for Story Time and I read one of my favorite new books–and one I think is an instant classic–DOG LOVES BOOKS! Dog loves books so much, he opens his own bookstore. When no one shows up, he occupies his time getting lost in his books, until one day a customer comes in and he know exactly what to recommend! While that’s not quite how it works here at Lemuria, we are avid readers as Peyton mentioned in her post and we try to know exactly what to recommend when you come in!

Another favorite right now is Man Gave Names to All the Animals. This book is the lyrics of a Bob Dylan song by the same name and the illustrations are done by Jim Arnosky. I just love the pictures in this book! The lush landscapes, all the animal species–you could look at this book for quite a while, just naming all the animals. And to top it off, the book comes with a CD of the Dylan song to listen to. This is a perfect book for any library.

And don’t miss next week’s great read with Bats at the Ballgame by Brian Lies. For those of you who loved Bats at the Library and Bats at the Beach, you will love this installment! They are our favorite bats since Stellaluna! See you next Saturday at 10:30!

A Long Bright Future

A Long Bright Future: The Very Good News about Living Longer by Laura L. Carstensen, Ph.D.

Broadway (August 2009)

Today there are about 50,000 100-year-old folks in the USA. By 2050, when I’m a hundred I will likely have a million peers. Can “old age”  be a long life? How many of us will grow old with physical fitness, mental sharpness, and financial independence? To grow older and make your own choices seems a good goal.

Long Bright Future is full of tips about how to make healthier lifestyle choices. It’s about consciously living a long life instead of being at the mercy of growing old and docile.

Defining our long life helps us to imagine what we want our wise years to be like: socially, financially, physically, and psychologically. Carstensen leads us to understand what might go wrong and what we can ensure by putting ourselves in the position to make informed choices. There is no reason for us to separate our life into artificial stages. Instead we can  put ourselves in the best position to enjoy life values throughout our entire lives.

Laura Carstensen (age 55) is the founding director of the Stanford Center on Longevity. She has given the baby boomers this guidebook as an action plan for living life’s later years with more happiness, better health, financial security, and a stronger awareness about choice and destiny.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about becoming an old man. Just recently I turned sixty. I’ve outlived my dad by 15 years and for the most part have had a fulfilled life. However, now as older age approaches, I’m focusing on the last third of my life and consciously trying to influence now what my future needs might be. Long Bright Future has helped me to form a perspective.

My Hollywood by Mona Simpson

Meet Lola, a Filipina nanny working in California to send her daughter back in the Philippines to medical school, while her husband waits patiently at home, an executive for Hallmark. Ruth, an immigrant as well, is Lola’s “teacher of America” and runs a placement service for nannies.

“Three women one baby. Usually it is the other way around,” Lola remarks to her nanny friend, though she knows well the challenge from raising her own children in a close knit community of the Philippines.

Lola works for Claire, a middle-aged mother of William and wife to Paul who is an aspiring comedic writer with one toe in Hollywood’s door. While Paul works many long hours, Lola is hired to help Claire, a composer who reflects deeply on her role as a mother and artist: “Music was all or nothing. Art gave no B pluses, no credit for trying. If I couldn’t make that, I’d be better off tending my son or working in a hospital. I still didn’t know if I could make that. And I was almost forty.”

While the relationships Mona Simpson explores are reminiscent of The Help in the complexity of paying someone to basically care and love for a child while parents pursue dreams closer to their own terms, one of the biggest differences is that the female role has been liberated from the stay-at-home fragile female with mothers like Claire pursuing professional careers. Claire is very aware of the choice she has made but still does not feel the freedom to seriously continue her creative work as a composer. At one point she admits to her husband, “I wanted to be a father.”

The chapters alternate between Lola and Claire. These two women and the choices they make stay with the reader long after finishing the book.

Though we may have long forgotten the freedom our first generation immigrant ancestors felt, you will think about the abundance of choice we have in the United States and how it must feel for a new immigrant like Lola. You will think about the choices your mother made, the choices you have made with your own children. I don’t have children but the novel still affected me deeply as women seem driven by an invisible force to fulfill as many roles as possible, making them central to the intricate relationships of the family.

As Lola explained the Filipino language to a child very dear to her: “Lola is grandma. Yaya for nanny. Ate, older sister . . . Tita for auntie . . . Inday, little sister . . . They are names but they are not exactly names. They are positions . . . Then we say the rosary.”

Mona Simpson will be at Lemuria for a signing (5:00) and reading (5:30) on Wednesday, September 15th.

Why I Read (maybe)

This is a long rambling blog, but this time I promise that the picture has something to do with the blog – it’s supposed to “capture the absurdities of contemporary life”

It’s funny. Even though I am constantly thinking and talking about books I hate reading reviews. I generally scan over them to see what is getting the press. I may skim the ones about the books I have read or plan to read to see if they are favorable, but I rarely actually read a review. You would think that it would help me at work to read them (you know – so I can sell the books) but I really don’t think it does help. For one thing – and I don’t think this is a revelation – but, they generally ruin the plot of the book for the reader. Or at least they effect the way you read a book. You know, this one is about a family, or this one is about terrorism – when in fact the reviewer may have missed the point. And of course sometimes the plot of a book isn’t really the point, but still…

I’ve been watching the reviews of Jonathan Franzen’s new book Freedom though and I think I’ve been interested for a couple of reasons: First, the media buzz around The Corrections in 2001 was such a big deal that everyone seemed to have an opinion about Franzen – you know, he’s the one that snubbed Oprah. I personally thought that it was a good idea to snub Oprah, but the novel itself fell flat. But he made such a bang that you couldn’t help but watch. After all, what else in the literary world does anyone other than us care about. (I liked his essay from Harper’s) The second reason that I have been watching for reviews of Freedom is that I actually really liked the book. I read it on vacation and just ate it up. I liked it, but I’m not really sure why – maybe some of these smart people who get paid to write reviews can help me out, right? Well, the first one I heard was on NPR one day – the reviewer said that he didn’t like the book because of Franzen’s disdain for his characters. I’m not sure if I like that as a reason to give a book a negative review, but I guess I see his point. I’m not sure I agree – the characters are definitely imperfect but I’m not sure that I think Franzen himself dislikes them.

This week the print reviews hit in the New York Times and the cover of Time. The Time piece describes Franzen’s self consciousness  – I happen to suspect that it’s a bit of an act – he’s just the to perfect nerd hero. (nerdy glassed, mussed hair, professor jacket, memoir about birding)

Here’s a quote from the NYT’s review: “it felt, at times, as if he were self-importantly inflating the symbolic meaning of his characters experiences”. Interesting and I guess I agree but don’t really mind. I think one of the most helpful thing I’ve read is that Franzen is trying to write the big American novel. It’s big and sprawling and covers a lot of ground. Again from the NYT’s review – Franzen’s characters capture “the absurdities of contemporary life”. Maybe it’s as simple as that – I like this book because I can relate. I’ve often suspected that a big part of the reason that I like books so much is a simple curiosity about other people.

Smart Chicks Kick It: September 16th!

I am so excited about this. Truly, if you come in here and talk to me about this, you may never get to leave again because I will talk your ear off! The Smart Chicks Kick It Tour is stopping here!!! Melissa Marr, Kelley Armstrong, Alyson Noel, Holly Black, Cassandra Clare, Sarah Rees Brennan, and Jessica Verday will all be stopping here on September 16th!!! Because of the size of this event, we will actually be hosting this event in Gluckstadt at Plantation Commons. We also have some rules to go along with the event. Both the directions and the rules can be found linked below.

Now, on to the fun part. Each of these amazing women writers has a new book out this summer and they are touring the United States and Canada. Below are all the covers of the new books and by clicking on them, you can get to know the authors and their series. The doors will open at 5:00 p.m. for book sales and at 6:00 p.m. the authors arrive for discussion and Q&A. I cannot wait to meet all of these great writers and I hope to see you there!

Are you coming? Comment and let us know!

Want more info? Here’s a great article on the whole tour!

Rules for the Lemuria’s Smart Chicks Stop

Directions To Jackson Smart Chicks Location, Plantation Commons

McSweeneys–We have it.

With John Brandon’s Citrus County being this month’s First Edition Club pick (and his first novel Arkansas being a big-seller too), I thought now would be a good time to introduce (or remind) everyone about McSweeneys–how wonderful it is AND how you can buy all sorts of McSweeneys publications right here at Lemuria.

So, first things first, the introduction.  McSweeneys was started in 1998 as a literary journal edited by Dave Eggers (you know Dave Eggers, the author of What is the What, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, The Wild Things, Away We Go, You Shall Know Our Velocity and Zeitoun) that only published works that had already been rejected by other magazines.  Since then it has evolved with authors now writing stories that are intended specifically for McSweeneys.  The company has gone from being just one quarterly journal into a small publication house that not only turns out the quarterly, but also has four other imprints and two monthly magazines (the Wholphin and The Believer).

Now that you know a little bit about McSweeneys and its beginnings, take a look at this list of my personal favorite authors who have been published by McSweeneys in one way or another:  Aimee Bender, Michael Chabon, Joyce Carol Oates, Ann Beattie, Per Petterson,Stephen King, and David Foster Wallace.

And guess what.  We have a little of everything here at Lemuria–books published by McSweeneys imprints, McSweeneys quarterly, issues of Wholphin, and issues of The Believer.  You should come by and take a look.  I’m afraid this little blog post doesn’t do them much justice.  -Kaycie

The Power of Friendship

As I was straightening some bookshelves this week, I came upon a new memoir: Let’s Take the Long Way Home by Gail Caldwell. Everyone knows that I am a sucker for memoirs, especially sad ones, so I grabbed it and started reading. It is the story of a friendship between Gail Caldwell and Carolyn Knapp.

If Knapp’s name seems familiar to you, she wrote several bestselling memoirs a few years ago. Her most popular work was, Drinking: A Love Story, which was on the New York Times list for several months. Knapp was, as she put it, a ”high-functioning alcoholic” as well as an award-winning journalist and Ivy League graduate from a prominent New England family. She appeared to be a happy and successful young woman but drinking had slowly taken hold of her life. Sadly, she would die from lung cancer at the age of forty two.

Knapp and Caldwell met when they were middle aged and a unique friendship began. Both were writers who had struggled with alcohol and also shared a great love of books.

Gail Caldwell is chief book critic for the Boston Globe and in 2001 won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.  She opens her memoir with“It’s an old story: I had a friend and we shared everything, and then she died and so we shared that.” She also wrote, “Death is a cliche until you’re in it.’’ How true, how true.

This book begins with Knapp’s death but Caldwell chronologically unfolds the back story of their relationship; telling how Knapp was the perfect friend but even funnier and more interesting than one could have imagined. They shared a passion for dogs and spent many hours talking while taking their dogs on long walks.

“What they never tell you about grief,’’ Caldwell writes, “is that missing someone is the simple part.’’ Seemingly small things take on huge proportions. For instance, she can’t force herself to throw out her set of keys to Knapp’s house. “These are keys to locks and doors that no longer exist, and I keep them in my glove compartment, where they have been moved from one car to another in the past couple of years.’’

As one reviewer put it, “Maybe the story of Gail Caldwell and Caroline Knapp’s friendship is an old story. But it is also a holy story. A familiar yet emotionally complex story that can bring a reader to tears.” For sure. -Norma

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