Tag: Let’s Talk Jackson (Page 4 of 7)

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: Life at the Hickory Pit

Written by Ginger Watkins, owner of Hickory Pit BBQ

When I first opened the Hickory Pit, I was 24 years old and no one in my family had ever been in the restaurant business — they thought I was nuts! Friends and family both would ask me all of the time if I was scared… I wasn’t scared at all! I was excited! But who is scared of anything at 24, right? I was too naive to know how hard the restaurant business can be, but determined enough to do what it took to make it work! 

Now, I admit, I’ve learned a lot of things the hard way… and have had some pretty hard knocks along the way! But buying the Hickory Pit in 1979 was the best decision I have ever made in my life. Not only have my customers become dear friends, but as a single mom I was able to raise my children in a fun, lively atmosphere — where their friends wanted to ‘hang out’. My daughter and her friends would pile up in the booths during the afternoon, when it was slow to talk about the day and they would sometimes go ahead and do their homework. One time my son was showing off to his friends (or possibly the girls) and dove off of a table like Superman; which resulted in a concussion!

My goal for the Hickory Pit was, and still is, to provide the best BBQ and the best customer service along with fun times and lasting memories! For 35 years, my customers have created Hickory Pit’s success. I am so proud to have earned three generations of customers… and two generations of employees! I would say success in the restaurant business comes from a LOT of hard work, being true to yourself as well as your customers! 

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

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: We provide bug spray

Written by Justin Showah 

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The Crawdad Hole encapsulates Jackson’s soul. When you walk inside the gate, you are greeted by a funky decor — strings of lights and picnic tables surrounded by haphazard pictures of sports and music personalities under tin roofs. A shaded creek runs by the outdoor dining area, and the food is spicy southern goodness you eat with a bunch of friends or family who have wheeled in their own cooler of beer. Y’all are subject to the weather, sitting around fans and firepits, the house supplying cans of bugspray, tiki torches, and citronella candles as darkness eases in. All races, ages, and walks of life commingle around the live music, the good times, and the feeling that you are hanging out at a clubhouse. There are no tablecloths here — heck, there’s not even silverware — you just come as you are, grab a big bowl of crawfish or shrimp, and start peeling.

I was my Dad’s first employee 18 years ago when he started with one crawfish pot in the back storage room of a rundown wooden building and remain amazed to have watched this place blossom from a weekend hobby into the established hangout it is today.  Like Jackson, the Crawdad Hole is unique in the world, and there will never be another place like it. I can’t think of another place I would rather be.

 

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

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: I found I was home

Written by Lee Anne Bryan

There is so much that I love about Jackson—it would fill up a book, not one blog post.  So I will limit myself to the circle that I drive every day, from my house to my job and then back home again.

I am not ashamed to admit that Briarwood Liquor Store is high on this list.  Nathan and Lesley are AWESOME.

THANK YOU GOD FOR WHOLE FOODS!  Not going to lie, this was my missing puzzle piece.  Now that I can get fish and kale for lunch that I didn’t have to cook myself—my life is complete.

St. Andrew’s Lower School.  It has provided our kids with the best start they could possibly have.

Murrah High School.  My first “real” job out of college.  And today has some of the most dedicated English teachers I have ever seen working there.  Go Mustangs!

The Eudora Welty House and Garden, which is my office.  Lots of people talk about a “dream job.”  I actually have one.  I get to walk around in Eudora Welty’s house during the day, telling visitors about her books and her love of reading and her life in Jackson.  I get to show school groups and students what it actually means to EDIT writing—by using Eudora’s drafts of One Writer’s Beginnings with her cut-and-pin method of revision.   Occasionally, I get to take a famous author through the house and be a little star-struck.   But I have to say that my favorite thing about my job is community.   There is a “Welty community” in Jackson, which includes the Eudora Welty Foundation, the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Millsaps College, the Belhaven neighborhood, Lemuria Bookstore, and a legion of fans, volunteers, supporters, and great readers.   I am surrounded every day by people who share my love of reading and education and who believe that books and discussion MATTER in the world.

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I grew up in Dallas.  Or, as one of my high school friends refers to it, “the land of lipstick.”  And if Dallas had any kind of literary community at all, I never saw it.  It was in my first semester at Millsaps College that Dr. Lorne Fienberg sent us as a class to Lemuria bookstore.   And I fell in love.  (Literally.  I met my husband at Lemuria.  But that’s a blog for another day.)  Between Lemuria, being able to go out at night to C.S.’s in running shoes and cutoffs, the great friends I made at Millsaps, and the fabulous book club we formed as Murrah teachers (which still meets), I found that I was HOME.

And now, twenty plus years later, my family and my job make me happier than I ever thought I could be.

Thanks, Jackson.  You’ve given and continue to give me a great life.

 

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 tonight at 5:00 at the Eudora Welty House and Garden. 

 

 

 

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: A picky reader she was not

Written by Chase Wynn 

Thank God she didn’t have a Kindle.

She being Eudora Welty, I mean. Have you been to her house? If you’re a reader, you really should. Not just because she was a great writer—and not just in the way you’re imagining. The little white-haired lady who wrote about quaint things like weddings in the Delta and people who lived in post offices? She was so, so much more than that. Read “No Place for You, My Love” sometime, or “The Hitch-Hikers,” or “A Still Moment.” Read “The Burning.”

That’s not why you should visit the house. Come look at her books. She had a lot of them—between five and six thousand in the house when she passed on. They’re everywhere. On shelves, yes, but also stacked on the couches, the tables, the spare beds. I’m told she liked to keep a different book going in every room of the house, so that no matter where she sat down, she could just keep going.

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The usual suspects are there—Faulkner, and Proust, and Woolf—but so many others, too. Things I didn’t expect. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. A Confederacy of Dunces. True Grit. And mysteries, mysteries, mysteries. A snobby reader our girl was not.

A man named Tim Parks wrote an article for The New York Review of Books that I’ve been thinking about a lot recently, especially when I walk in the Welty house: “The conditions in which we read today are not those of fifty or even thirty years ago… [today] every moment of serious reading has to be fought for.” I don’t mean to sound snarky when I say, “Thank God she didn’t have a Kindle.” This isn’t some sort of anti-tech rant. Heck, you’re reading this on a blog, right? But in a time when serious reading is so hard to do, in a time when you really have to fight for it, it’s nice to walk through her Tudor arch doorway and into a place that feels like a monument not only to a great writer, but to a truly great reader.

It’s the collection of a real reader, too. Yeah, there are some beautiful, leather-bound volumes in there. Mostly, though, there are tattered paperbacks and creased, worn out spines. She read the hell out of those books. She loved them—you can tell.

Come check her out sometime.

The Eudora Welty House will be hosting Ken Murphy for a signing of Jackson: Photographs by Ken Murphy Monday, August 11th @ 5 p.m. The book is also available for purchase at Lemuria (800-366-7619, or online at lemuriabooks.com)

Let’s Talk Jackson: The “It” factor

 

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Billy Neville opened “The Rogue” when I was in high school at Murrah. From the first day, Billy’s store was the coolest in Jackson.

Billy’s influence on the youth of Jackson at that time was remarkable. He had the “it” and his customers wanted “it” too. Billy’s style was interactive and engaging. The Rogue quickly grew into the 2nd floor space in the Capri building. Upstairs, he had a dartboard where us guys would go after school and toss darts in the retail store! Billy was ahead of his time, a marketer of fun with style. I even think I won the Rogue in a dart toss tournament! The feeling one had when leaving his groundbreaking store was that everyone was a winner, just for having the Rogue experience.

Billy’s Rogue business boomed and grew and grew and grew. The new Rogue overlooking the new interstate was the result, becoming truly a Jackson, MS institution.
A few years later, retailing became my occupation when I opened the bookstore. First Billy Neveille and then Bernie Weis, of Highland Village’s Maison Weis, became my duel mentors. From these two gentlemen, both clothiers, I learned how to market and think about retailing as an occupation. Their influence on me was powerful. This sounds unusual, since they were so interwoven in the culture of style and presentation of the time and Lemuria was a product of the counter-culture of the time. I believe when you get down to it, retailing is just retailing. It’s about being on the front lines, you are who you are and the customer sees this realness, no matter what.

Gosh, we all know retailing is hard and grueling, a pioneering of sorts. However, this type of work offers the ability for you to be creative, productive, helpful and can be rewarding while living on the front lines of life. Anybody anytime can make a request and your ability to prospect and answer with service is your reward. Customer service in actualization determines success or failure. This is a continuous process of daily helping, sharing, and reaping rewards.

Billy Neville’s influence on a generation or two of would-be be clothiers all over Mississippi is unprecedented, and his style has influenced retailers of all sorts. He led us with his spirit of sharing, and is a living example of Paul Hawkins’ “Growing Your Business” concept, which was the ‘80’s-now evolved into the modern terms of conscious business/capitalism. Billy’s spirit helped me formulate my concept of Lemuria. Thank you Billy for all the years of friendship and leadership, you have been invaluable to generations of Jacksonians, while making us look good in the process.
The Rogue is still open and thriving, thanks to Luke Abney, who carries Billy’s torch with his own spirit of small business in our city.

Written by John

 

Jackson: photographs by Ken Murphy is available now for purchase. To order a copy, call Lemuria Books at 601.366.7619, visit us online at lemuriabooks.com, or drop by the iconic Rogue to pick up a signed copy! Join us today from 1:00 to 3:00 at The Rogue for a celebration of Jackson.

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: Thirty-Five Years Later

Written by Malcolm White

By the time I moved to Jackson in the spring of 1979, just in time for the Easter Flood, I had already lived in Washington D.C., Los Gatos, California and New Orleans.  I committed to a one year contract for a job offer I simply could not refuse.  My plan was to get a good year’s experience and sock some money away before heading back to NOLA where a job offer to return to my old restaurant team and my idea of southern, global culture awaited. For a lot of reasons and thirty five years later, I’m still here.  If I had to name three, I would say opportunity, love and comfort are the most obvious, but Eudora Welty, Margaret Walker Alexander, William Winter, Willie Morris, Sam Myers, Cassandra Wilson and Charles Evers were a few more.

My best friend Michael Rubenstein made sure I met all the right people and touched all the essential bases in that first year. The music scene was ripe and the community was ready to enjoy a good gathering.  I felt free and empowered, untethered and boundless.  I worked hard and took chances and the climate suited my clothes. And it was home of the great southern, Greek-American “comeback sauce”.

When I presented B.B. King, Mose Allison, John Lee Hooker, Big Joe Williams or Dr. John, Ray Charles or John Prine, people came and supported those shows. I called for a parade and people showed up in costumes, ready to march.  I opened clubs and restaurants and people came to eat and drink.  I met every writer who came to Lemuria or The Book Worm and attended every lecture and concert from Allen Ginsberg at Tougaloo to Ace Cannon at Pop’s Around The Corner to James Brown at the Masonic Lodge.

And when I called my brother Hal in 1985 and told him I had the lease on the old GM&O Freight Depot in downtown, he packed his bags and we started construction on what would become Hal & Mal’s, now 30 years and two generations in the making.  And this place we created, would become the organic gathering place of the Jackson we envisioned, a place to eat local food, to hear traditional music and to celebrate our home, our town, our culture.

Rich, diverse, urban and rural, Jackson is an enigma and an oasis.  “Diddy Wah Diddy”, Willie Dixon would say, “ain’t no town, ain’t no city, just a little place called Diddy Wah Diddy”.

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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 and photographer Ken Murphy in celebrating Jackson tonight at 8:00 at Hal and Mal’s. 

Let’s Talk Jackson Guest Post: A Haven for Creatives

Written by Ron Chaney (better known as Chane), who is the creative director of Fondren After 5 and owner of Swell-O-Phonic, Soma, and Studio Chane in Fondren. 

Jackson is in many ways a hidden gem of creativity.  I started realizing this years ago when our store started promoting all-age rock shows.  There were always new bands popping up in an endless fashion.  Today as a shop owner and the creative director of Fondren After 5, I am more certain than ever that there is a growing strength of creatives in Jackson.  I feel Jackson is now a fertile resource  that brings many artists back from other places where many had escaped to learn.  Now many are back bringing knowledge and inspiration from other big cities and the artist revolution is happening – Yes, in Jackson Mississippi.  I am proud to be from here because JXN is now a never-ending supply of the same inspiration that I used to have to chase elsewhere.

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Join us tonight at Fondren after 5! We will have tents set up in front of Fondren Corner and Brent’s Drugs. Don’t miss this amazing Jackson event!

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. 

 

Let’s Talk Jackson: Thank You.

Almost two years ago I came to work at Lemuria. On my second night of work we had a HUGE event celebrating the release of the book My Bookstore, and long time friend of the store Barry Moser joined us to read the essay he wrote for the book about Lemuria. I remember sitting in Dot Com, which was packed to the gills, beer in hand (you could drink at WORK?), marveling at how much this community swelled with pride to think that their bookstore was featured in the list of greats. I think that’s what got me more than anything: the ownership that our community feels towards Lemuria. It’s no longer just John’s bookstore, it’s yours.

You’ve seen us through multiple locations, an awful recession, what feels like hundreds of John Grisham releases, and the fight to make room for ourselves on the Internet. I can’t tell you how often you come up to the front desk to buy a newspaper or to pick up your First Editions Club book and tell me with a look of satisfaction on your face, “I grew up in this store. I remember shopping at Lemuria when you were still in The Quarter”.

So many independent bookstores all over the country have had to close their doors over the past two decades, and I believe it is a fate that we have escaped because of YOU. Because for so long you’ve believed that this store is important, that we have a positive impact on the community, and because you so value the significance of reading and supporting authors.

So I’d like to take the time today, a HUGE day for our bookstore, to say thank you. Thank you for investing in us, and for giving me the best two years of my professional career. Thank you for coming to signings for first time authors- authors who have now won Pulitzer Prizes and National Book Awards. Thank you for encouraging us and sticking with us during the two year process of publishing our book on Jackson, and thank you, thank you, thank you for your continuing patronage.

It is my pleasure to officially invite you all to an open house in Banner Hall tonight at 5:00, featuring the official release our new book, Jackson: Photographs by Ken Murphy. Ken will be joining us to sign the book in Lemuria, and Banner Hall will be rocking and rolling into the night. You can expect live music from Sam Mooney and Abigail Osteen , a pop-up art gallery from Art Space 86, $1 beers in Lemuria, and general good cheer towards our great city. We owe so much of this to you.

 

Written by Hannah

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. 

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 Guest Post: Artists by Artists

Written by Jerrod Partridge

Recently, while flipping through Ken Murphy’s new book Jackson I came across a picture and was shocked.  Shocked because I had been at the same place within days, if not hours, of when the photo was taken.

Kelso

A couple of years ago I was asked to participate in a group show called “Artists by Artists” at the Mississippi Museum of Art.   It was to be a collection of artwork to highlight the unique relationship among visual artists. I immediately knew that I wanted to do a painting of Jackson artist Richard Kelso; both because he has been a very influential mentor, and because I had wanted an excuse to try  to paint the beautiful light of his studio which he captures so well.

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Notice that the painting on the easel is the same in both my painting and Ken’s photo.  The difference is that I made Richard’s painting a rectangle, with his permission of course, rather than the square format because it worked better with my composition.

So I was shocked to see the photograph, but also very excited to see that the studio of who I consider to be one of the finest painters in Mississippi was included in this remarkable survey of Jackson sights.

David West and I are very excited to be bringing Art Space 86, our pop-up gallery, to Banner Hall  on August 5th, in conjunction with Lemuria’s release of this remarkable book.

 

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!

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