I'm a freelance writer and editor currently at work on completing the first draft of my first novel. I'm also an award-winning journalist with over 30 years spent at newspapers in Kentucky, North Carolina and Mississippi.
A short time after beginning my time as publisher/editor of The Clarksdale (Ms.) Press Register, I picked up a single second-place award given out by the Mississippi Press Association for work done by the newspaper in 2017.
At that time, in June 2018, I silently set a goal in my mind
that we’d exceed that number – that lone second-place award – with our work in
2018.
Exceed it, we did.
On Saturday, during a gathering of the state’s journalists in Biloxi at the summer convention of the Mississippi Press Association, the Clarksdale Press Register was honored with 26 awards in the association’s Better Newspaper Contest, including a General Excellence, marking it as the top newspaper in its class.
The awards were a culmination of a nine-month period, from
our arrival in mid-March to the end of the contest period in December, in which
the newspaper staff and contributors took on the challenge of making it one of
Mississippi’s best newspapers and one that the community would be glad to call
its own.
There were longer hours, more work asked of everyone and a
call to do things a different way.
In the end, those efforts were recognized by members of the
Kansas Press Association, which judged the annual contest, as well as the
community with an increase in our readership and circulation numbers.
According to judges, the Press Register had, in addition to the overall General Excellence award, the best Lifestyles section and Magazine/Periodical (Coahoma Living) in its category, consisting of other weekly newspapers across Mississippi. The paper also received second-place awards for its design and Editorial Page, while our Women in Business special section received a third-place honor.
Staff writer Josh Troy received five awards, including a
first-place award for best magazine story with his feature on Roger Stolle,
owner of the Cathead music store in Clarksdale.
My talented wife – and unpaid volunteer writer – Danette
Banks received a third-place award in the Feature Story category with her
profile on local musician John Mohead. And the two of us combined to win the
entry for Best News/Feature Package with her story and my photos and layout of
a profile on another Clarksdale musician, LaLa Craig.
I was lucky enough to beat out some talented journalists and
receive 15 awards. Included in that number were four first-place awards: the
before-mentioned News/Feature Package; best Business Story with a profile on
Mary Williams and what prompted her to start an urgent-care medical facility in
Clarksdale; top Commentary Column with my entry of three columns addressing
such things as crime and apathy in Clarksdale; and first place in Feature Photo
with the photo linked to this post that shows children enjoying a concert on
the lawn of the Cutrer Mansion in Clarksdale.
I knew that we had done good work during our time in
Clarksdale and Coahoma County, but was still surprised by the sheer number of
honors thrown our way. Secretly, I was hoping we’d win six to seven awards and
then reach middle figures the next year and continue to build on our success.
These awards and turnaround in a very short time only
reinforce the effort and talents of the limited number of folks who were able
to put out an award-winning product in the Mississippi Delta and show what can
be accomplished with initiative, hard work, talent and a bit of sacrifice.
I sincerely appreciate everyone who played a part in The Press Register’s success.
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Many of the characters and locations that turn up in the timeless works of playwright Tennessee Williams — including scenes from “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Orpheus Descending” — originated from a small town on the flat open land known as the Mississippi Delta and an oxbow body of water named Moon Lake.
ByMichael Banks
So many of the characters and scenes that have been shared on a world stage through the words of Tennessee Williams can be traced back to the time the famous playwright called Clarksdale, Miss., and Coahoma County his home.
An assortment of Blanches and Stellas have whispered the
words Moon Lake while audiences sit transfixed, deep within their own visions
of characters and scenes drawn from Williams’ Deep South and life in the
Mississippi Delta.
And it is still now, some 35 years after Williams’ death at
the age of 71, in which this area is still celebrating and creating new ways to
showcase its small part in all that was Tennessee Williams.
For Clarksdale and Coahoma County is very much a part of
what Tennessee Williams was and Tennessee Williams is very much a part of what
Clarksdale and Coahoma County is and can become.
‘Home is where you hang your childhood’
It is believed that Edwina Dakin Williams and her two
children moved in with her parents in a church rectory on DeSoto Avenue in
Clarksdale sometime during the late spring or early summer of 1917.
Tom, as Tennessee was known then, would have been six years
old at the time when he and his mother and older sister, Rose, moved in with
his grandparents, the Rev. Walter E. and Rosina Otte Dankin, who lived in
Clarksdale from 1917-’32 while the Rev. Dakin was the rector of St. George’s
Episcopal Church.
Tom and his mother and sister would live in Clarksdale for
about 16 months with Tom attending Eliza Clark School until the trio moved to
St. Louis in 1918 to join his father, Cornelius Coffin Williams, who had been a
traveling salesman for most of Tom’s early life before he finally landed a desk
job.
Still, Tom and his sister would make frequent trips to
Clarksdale to visit their grandparents, who by this time had moved into the new
rectory located on Sharkey Avenue beside St. George’s Episcopal Church.
And Tom and Rose would live with the Dakins in Clarksdale at
different times due to their mother’s poor health following the birth of their
brother, Dakin. Tom lived in the Sharkey rectory for 16 months in 1920-21 and
completed fourth grade at Oakhurst Elementary School.
He would then visit the Dakins most summers until graduating
high school in 1929.
Panny Mayfield, a Clarksdale journalist who has done a
number of stories on Williams through the years, believes the days and nights
Williams spent in Clarksdale and Coahoma County was “an idyllic, quiet time.”
“I think he was very happy here. It was the happiest time of his life.”
— Panny Mayfield, Clarksdale (Miss.) journalist
“I think he was very happy here. It was the happiest time of
his life,” she said.
Acting coach and documentary filmmaker Karen Kohlhaas
agrees, pointing to a popular quote attributed to Williams: “Home is where you
hang your childhood.”
Gold buckle of the
cotton belt
She says the Clarksdale of Williams’ time in the 1920s is
very much different than it is now. At the time, Clarksdale was called “Little
New York,” Kohlhaas said, as there were as many millionaires per capita here as
there were in New York City.
“It was known as the gold buckle of the cotton belt. It was
one of the richest small towns in America because of the cotton boom,” she said
of the planters who were getting up to $1 per pound of cotton at the time.
But those heady days wouldn’t last as the cotton futures
market crashed and the price of a pound of cotton sunk to a nickel as many lost
fortunes.
“People lost everything,” Kohlhaas said. “But still, they
continued on. It was the gambler mentality. That whole rise and fall with how
good of a crop you were going to get.”
And it would be these people, that mentality, that would
serve as characters in many of Williams’ future plays.
“These are the people he is writing about,” said Kohlhaas,
who makes her home in New York City and has been working on her documentary of
Williams for the past eight years.
“Up here in the North, people tend to paint the South with
one brush. But the Delta is so incredibly different from the Old South, like
Virginia. It was sort of like the Wild West as opposed to Gone With the Wind.
“I did not understand it at all until I started working on
this project. As I learned a lot more about the Delta and Delta personalities,
I began to see and understand how that is embedded in his plays.”
The people who gave
his stories life
Kohlhaas believes the story of Williams is not so much the
tale of “this little boy remembering his time here” but rather “it was a
constant association with the place through his grandfather.”
She also believes Williams was “deeply sensitive” and pulled
from his experience of “being both inside and outside the society of
Clarksdale.”
Being the grandson of the town’s beloved Episcopalian priest
gave the family social status, but Kohlhaas says “at the same time, he did not
fit in with a lot of the kids in town.”
This could help explain Williams’ fondness for “compassion
and understanding for people on the edges of society,” Kohlhaas said.
“He would spend his time writing and alone. He wasn’t the
typical Delta boy who wanted to go out and fish and hunt. He and his sister
both had big imaginations and were very creative.”
Mayfield said she has heard the tale that the character
Brick Pollitt from Williams’ play Cat On
a Hot Tin Roof was based on a boy who lived right down the street from the
rectory and had apparently beaten up Tom on one occasion.
She said that a family member of Brick’s relayed to her on a
later occasion that “they thought that Tennessee Williams got even” with his
portrayal as Brick as an alcoholic, aging former high school football star who
is in a strained marriage.
Williams drew on memories from his Clarksdale childhood as
material in his plays. Names such as Blanche, Stella, Brick, Laura, Wingfield,
Cutrer and Baby Doll became namesakes for famous Williams characters. He also
referenced local stores, towns and landmarks such as Moon Lake and the stone
angel in Grange cemetery.
Shown is a marker noting the property beside Moon Lake that has become a destination of Tennessee Williams fans as the “Moon Lake Casino” that was featured in many of his Williams’ plays was located at the site.(Photo by Michael Banks)
She said Williams didn’t like the time he spent in St. Louis.
“He loved the people, the wit, the humor, the style of people
like the Cutrers,” Kohlhaas said.
“He hated it and didn’t take to it at all,” Kohlhaas said.
“He wanted to come back to Clarksdale.”
Williams would continue to have a strong relationship with
his grandparents through their remaining years. His grandmother would send him
money until he finally achieved commercial success with “The Glass Menagerie.”
“She truly believed in him,” Mayfield said.
His grandfather, who lived to be 95, would visit Williams
after he became famous and his grandson would always ask about the residents of
Clarksdale as Mayfield said he kept up with the Cutrers and the Clarks and
their stories.
Kohlhaas said the last documented visit by Williams to the
Mississippi Delta, that she can find, is his trip to Beloit in December 1955
when he visited for the filming of “Baby Doll.”
A ‘research center’
for actors
With its history and the preservation of several landmarks
mentioned in Williams’ plays, this area has attracted both professional actors
and common tourists seeking the Tennessee Williams experience.
Mayfield says Clarksdale has become a sort of “research
center” for actors and actresses portraying characters from Williams’ many
works. She has served as host for many, including Ruth Wilson who portrayed
Stella from A Streetcar Named Desire
during a London run and also the famous English actress Lia Williams, who was
recognized for her role as Blanche du Bois in a production of Streetcar in Dublin, Ireland.
Recently, accomplished actors Robert Cuccioli and Laila
Robins visited the county as part of a fundraiser to assist in the opening of
the Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum. In addition to many film and TV roles,
Robins has portrayed the character of Blanche from “Streetcar” on many
occasions and one of her first leading roles was in the role of Alma Winemiller
in the Williams play “Summer and Smoke.”
Actors Robert Cuccioli and Laila Robins visited Coahma County as part of a fundraiser to assist in the opening of the Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum in Clarksdale.(photo by Michael Banks)
“In my imagination, I had often wondered who Alma was and
who she is. All actors want to do research and see what inspired the character
they are portraying,” Robins said. “What he writes of is in all of our DNAs. It
captures us as human beings.”
Kohlhaas was able to take the Cuccioli and Robins to many of
the notable areas in the county mentioned in Williams’ work. One moment that
sticks with her was watching Robins as she visited Uncle Henry’s, the site of
one of Williams’ most riveting scenes from “A Streetcar Named Desire.”
“She stood there, exactly where the Moon Lake Casino was,
and looked out toward Moon Lake, walking the steps that Blanche would have
taken. She, literally, began to cry as it was that moving to her,” Kohlhaas
said.
Clarksdale is
Shakespeare’s house
There is something special about coming to this area,
Kohlhaas said.
“Clarksdale is a huge American theatre history location.
It’s like Shakespeare’s house. I just hope to bring more and more awareness to
it.”
One thing she is doing is serving as curator for the
soon-to-open Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum at 106 Sharkey Ave. in
Clarksdale. Plans are for the museum to open Oct. 12 during the Mississippi
Delta Tennessee Williams Festival.
The museum will document Williams’ childhood in Clarksdale
and his family history, as well as the local people, places and history that
Williams featured most in his famous plays. Kohlhaas said it’s “been like
decorating a giant doll house.”
The mission of the museum is to educate visitors about
Clarksdale and the Mississippi Delta history as they appear in Williams’ work.
Not far from the rectory is a Tennessee Williams Park that
was dedicated in October 1994. Other popular spots to visit are the former Moon
Lake Casino and the Cutrer Mansion, which dates back to 1916.
Jen Waller, who is director of the Coahoma County Higher
Education Center/Cutrer Mansion, said they see a steady stream of people
wanting to see the home of the family mentioned so often in Williams’ works.
Clarksdale’s founding father, John Clark, had nine sons and
one daughter and her name was Blanche Clark Cutrer. She married John W. Cutrer
in a ceremony that was presided over by the Rev. Dakin and was considered to be
one of the most lavish events of its time.
“We don’t have as much traffic as I wish we did, but I do
love it when tourists stop by and I get to tell them about the Cutrers. It’s
almost always because they’ve seen the house connected to Tennessee Williams,”
she said. “We do have a small tourist traffic, but not tons. Maybe it will
increase with the rectory museum.”
The main event tied to Williams here is the Mississippi
Delta Tennessee Williams Festival, which is now in its 26th year.
This year’s festival will run from Thursday, Oct. 11 through Saturday, Oct. 13.
There will be a kickoff dinner and dancing, historic tours
and a panel on the Cutrer family and Clarksdale history. Saturday’s events
include a monologue and scene competition for students from all over the state,
followed by an afternoon of plays performed on porches on homes located in the
city’s historic district.
One of the leading organizers of the event is Mayfield, who
was involved with the first festival in 1992.
“She’s really been legendary over the years,” Waller said of
Mayfield. “She’s been carrying this torch for Tennessee Williams and the blues
even before anyone else was really doing it.”
Appreciation only
grows
Mayfield said Williams’ stories persevere as he was “very
courageous” in his writing.
“They still have meaning… he wrote of difficulties in
relationships,” Mayfield said.
Kohllaas, who originally wanted to finish her documentary
two years ago, said it’s been “quite a process” of putting together the film
with the working title “Tennessee Williams and the Mississippi Delta.”
She said, “There’s just so much material and I want to make
sure it’s correct. It’s been like making a giant quilt.”
Still, Kohlaas has learned much about Williams during the
process and it has only enhanced her appreciation of his talents.
“He is the Shakespeare and the Chekhov of America. He used
lyricism and poetry in his writing like Shakespeare, but like Checkhov, he
wrote of a decaying society and an aristocracy that was steadily descending.”
She adds that those hundreds of hours spent in the Carnegie
Public Library researching Williams and the countless visits she’s made here
have also revealed “just how much the Delta actually influenced him, especially
early in his career, which are considered some of his greatest pieces of work.”
Waller has spent most of her life in Coahoma County and
admits it wasn’t until 1996 when she first became aware of Williams’
association with Clarksdale. As part of the Williams Festival that year, there
was a production of “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” at the former Larry Thompson Center
at the old movie theatre on Yazoo Avenue.
“It was excellent. I remember going to that and thought it
was amazing,” said Waller, who admits her favorite Williams play is “The Glass
Menagerie.”
But the worldwide impact hit her even more when she and
Clarksdale resident Eva Connell visited New Orleans for that town’s Williams
Festival two years ago.
“We were at this one place and they did a reading of a
one-act play. I’d never heard of it before, but it was all about Friars Point
and Moon Lake. This was in New Orleans in front of people from all over the
world. That was eye-opening. The ones that really didn’t get much play, he used
these same landmarks in these shorter plays.”
Waller said, “It’s become such a valuable piece of our
history and it’s really become known worldwide.”
These words written by Williams are now being spoken in many
dialects. There’s Baby Doll in German. Blanche in a thick Irish brogue. Or
Stella on a South African stage.
Williams and his wonderful scenes and these stories of the
people and places of Clarksdale and Coahoma County continue on.
As Kohlhaas says, “This little boy who lived in Clarksdale
ended up reaching the entire world.”
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Author Hank Burdine’s latest book is a collection of his stories about the people, places and things that make up the Delta.
And
Burdine is the perfect person to share those stories with his Southern
drawl and storytelling ease that leaves one craving a sip of whiskey as
they sit along the banks of the Mississippi River.
Burdine was in
Clarksdale on Thursday, reading passages from his new book, “Dust in the
Road: Recollections of a Delta Boy.” The event, held at the Cutrer
Mansion, was part of the Community Book Talks lecture series that is
sponsored by the Carnegie Public Library in partnership with the Coahoma
County Higher Education Center.
The book is a collection of
stories Burdine has shared in the monthly Delta magazine. He has been
writing for Delta magazine since its inception in 2003. His first column
was titled “Why Mississippi Will Always Be My Home.”
“That was 67 issues ago,” Burdine said.
During
Thursday’s event, Burdine read the introduction in his latest book, as
well as the story “The Night I Lost My Pants at a Debutante Ball.”
He
is proud of the work and thankful for contributions by “two dear, dear
friends of mine”– authors Julia Reed, from Greenville, and Richard
Grant, who wrote “Dispatches From Pluto.” Reed wrote the foreword, while
Grant wrote the epilogue.
“I’m honored those two cats wanted to put something in the book,” Burdine said.
In
an article, Grant wrote, “Hank Burdine is a writer, raconteur and bon
vivant, a big-hearted, loud-drawling, whiskey-loving son of Greenville,
Mississippi.”
Burdine said he hasn’t received many compliments in
his life, but one of the greatest compliments he ever received was when
he was described “as a Rule from Ruleville.”
The introduction to his book reflects on the Delta and memories of his mother.
“So,
it is my belief, in agreement with my momma, that while the people of
the Delta are what makes it so unique, it is the fact that in most
cases, it was our grandparents and great-grandparents that were the true
pioneers of this region.
“And it was that pioneering spirit and
blood and guts and tears and sweat that beat the Mississippi River back,
felled the trees and began to plow and mold the richest land imaginable
in order to give us, today, the Mississippi Delta.”
Burdine said
Clarksdale and its surrounding area “has got a real, deep part in my
heart” and is a special place for him. He talked of Coahoma County’s
Robert E. Bobo and his exploits as a bear hunter.
Burdine, who is
also a commissioner on the Mississippi Levee Board, spoke of the twists
and turns of the Sunflower River as it makes its way through the county
and eventually heads to Ruleville and the rest of the lower Delta.
“We’re
all so connected and it’s such an integral part of everything as this
Delta is. It’s the uniqueness of this Delta, not only to us that live
here and have been here, but to folks who want to know about it,” he
said.
“The Delta is very special right now. It’s very hot right
now,” said Burdine, who recently hosted the second annual Hank Burdine
Blues and Greens Festival at the Shack Up Inn near Clarksdale. He
pointed out that 80 percent of the inn’s clientele are visitors from
Europe.
That’s an example, Burdine said, of the people learning about the Delta and wanting to know more about it.
“It’s
not the high glitz and neon glory, but it’s the old stuff, the way we
know it. It’s the Delta stuff,” Burdine said. “It’s the deep stuff. It’s
the stuff in our guts. This is what we got. This is who we are.”
He said when people ask where he’s from, the answer is simple.
“I’m not from Clarksdale. I’m not from Greenville. I’m from the Delta.”
He said that simple statement covers a lot of people, a lot of races and a lot of creeds and nationalities.
“But, it’s us and it’s our Delta.”
Want a copy?
Hank Burdine’s book, “Dust in the Road: Recollections of a Delta Boy,” is sold exclusively through Delta magazine and authorized dealers. Call 662-843-2700 or go online to deltamagazine.com to order a copy.
(This article first appeared in the Dec. 12, 2018, issue of The Clarksdale Press Register.)
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One winter morning earlier this year, Bernadine Reed suddenly found herself in a life-and-death situation, trying to calm and corral 40 panicked first – through fifth-graders as smoke filled Darlington Public School Bus No. 3071.
This story appears in the June 2019 issue of South Carolina Living magazine.
By Michael Banks
Two years ago, Bernadine Reed, who grew up in tiny Dovesville, S.C., left the noise and chaos of Baltimore, Md., to return to the piece and quiet of small-town life in rural South Carolina.
But on one winter morning earlier this year, Reed suddenly found herself in a life-and-death situation, trying to calm and corral 40 panicked first – through fifth-graders as smoke filled Darlington Public School Bus No. 3071.
“I told everybody, ‘We have to get off this bus now,’”
Reed recalls.
A vehicle had slammed into the back of the bus after
Reed had stopped before a railroad crossing on Jan. 22 at about 6:30 a.m. The
only adult on the bus, Reed was able to guide the children, who were all crying
and upset, out of the bus and to a nearby field. While flames consumed the vehicle,
Reed was able to reach her supervisor and then called each child’s parents to
let them know they were safe.
“Everybody looks at this as me being a hero. I tell them, ‘I’m just a mother that got 40 kids off a bus. That’s all.'”
— Bernadine Reed, bus driver in Darlington, S.C.
Reed, who had never driven a bus before, attributes the intensive training she had undergone in December for staying calm under fire. She had only been a driver for 45 days prior to the accident.
“I’ve been around children all my life,” said Reed,
who had been a special needs educator and also ran her own daycare in Maryland.
Reed says she has a passion for her “babies,” which is
what she calls the children who ride her bus.
“All my kids love me. They call me ‘Miss BeeBee,’” she says. “I think kids are just drawn to me. I’m like a magnet for kids and they listen to me. They know they’re on Miss BeeBee’s bus and Miss BeeBee don’t play. We are on this bus to get to school and home, safe and sound.”
Bernadine
Reed
Age: 49
Home turf: Darlington
In the
family: Reed’s 27-year-old daughter,
Shantee Jacobs, recently moved from Maryland to Darlington and also became a
school bus driver. She believes her entire family, which includes four children
and three grandsons, will eventually move to South Carolina.
Accolades: While the parents of the children she rescued
rewarded her with flowers and candy, Reed was also honored by the local school
system and received a key to the city of Darlington.
“I told them, ‘Y’all don’t have to do this. This is my
job. This is what I do,’” Reed says.
If a movie’s
made, who plays the role of Bernadine Reed? “Queen Latifah,” she says with a laugh.
Did you know? Reed admits to being “a little bit adventurous.” She
wants to go bungee jumping and says she likes to climb trees and “I want to
jump out of an airplane, at least one time.”
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The role of family, specifically, that of the father, in the life of some of the greatest athletes in the world is at the heart of Wright Thompson’s newest book, “The Cost of These Dreams.”
The role of family, specifically, that of the father, in the life of some of the greatest athletes in the world is at the heart of Wright Thompson’s newest book, “The Cost of These Dreams.”
And the Clarksdale, Miss., native didn’t have to go far in searching for inspiration in telling the stories, as he counted on the life lessons he learned from his parents, Mary and Walter Thompson, and the community he grew up in.
“You talk about the things you get from your parents. The thing I got most of all was, for better or for worse, a complete, abiding belief that if I wanted to do it, I could do it,” Thompson said. “I kept believing despite severe evidence that suggested I should quit.”
“The Cost of These Dreams” is a collection of stories that he has written over the years for ESPN The Magazine. The main character in a lot of the stories is “place,” Thompson said during an appearance Friday at the Carnegie Public Library in downtown Clarksdale as part of its Community Book Talks Lecture Series.
And Clarksdale, he believes, is a “crash course in how to really dig into a place.”
Thompson grew up in Clarksdale on Court Street, where his mother, who is a retired teacher from Lee Academy, still lives. His father passed away in September 2004.
Wright believes the experience of growing up here plays a large part in how he writes and his interview process in his work as a senior writer for ESPN and as an executive producer of the television series “True South” on the SEC Network and “Backstory” on ESPN.
“When you’re confronted with so much hypocrisy, it makes you either want to cut through myths… which is basically what these things are, really,” Thompson said, holding up his book. “There is a through-line for all of these stories. Every one of them is trying to tell a story that someone doesn’t want told.
“That’s certainly formed here (in Clarksdale). At an early age, I think you decide if you’re going to tear it down or become part of it. And that’s very little middle ground. I understand how people come to both decisions.
“I don’t think any of this happens if I’m from a suburb of Atlanta with the exact same parents and the exact same situation. The exact same neighbors and the exact same schools. Same teachers and same people in the classes.
“I got to think there’s something from being from this place that gets into you and, if you can get out of the place, you can carry that like a sword and a shield everywhere you go for the rest of your life. If you crawl your way out of this, there’s not a single thing in the world… I mean everything after that is easy. It’s almost like the greatest possible training you could ever have.”
The 1996 Lee graduate attended the University of Missouri, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism. He would work for various newspapers, including The Clarksdale Press Register, Times-Picayune in New Orleans and the Kansas City Star, before he landed a job as a senior writer for ESPN.com and ESPN The Magazine in 2006.
He has written hundreds of articles for numerous publications, including a recent article in Garden and Gun magazine about Moon Lake and Katherine’s restaurant. He’s won a number of sports journalism awards and also an Emmy for his E:60 on noodling, the sport of fishing for catfish with bare hands. He is a member of the Clarksdale/Coahoma County Sports Hall of Fame.
And as much appreciation as Thompson has for this community, Clarksdale residents are as equally supportive as more than 100 people turned out for the author’s appearance Friday.
Thompson jokingly said he thought about titling his latest book “Back For More Cash,” which got large laughs from the audience, but he admitted it was a bit of a chore narrowing down the 14 stories that eventually made it into the publication.
“When I read it, it sort of took my breath away,” Thompson said of the book’s preface, which he wrote over 90 minutes spent at a booth in the Yazoo Pass restaurant downtown. “They (the varied stories) really do fit together in an interesting way and speak to each other in an interesting way that was completely unintended. That was a total accident.”
During Friday’s appearance, Thompson read portions of his story titled “Michael Jordan’s Not Left the Building,” which detailed the 50th birthday of Jordan and how the former basketball superstar and one of the most famous people in the world was learning to live a life where “now you’re just a guy whose knees hurt.”
Reflecting upon Jordan and his voracious appetite for competition, Thompson told the audience, “He very much seeks out that part of his life that’s gone.”
And that adjustment of fading from the limelight is at the heart of his newest collection of stories.
“I feel like you spend 48 percent of your life wanting to be something, four percent of your life being it and 48 percent of your life having been it. And that’s certainly true for every person in this book.”
He
believes there is a bit of a “mourning period” for athletes once they
retire and try to decide how the next part of their life is played out.
“It’s interesting because people want to be famous because it sounds fun. But when they get famous, they want to give it back. And you can’t give it back because you’ve already made too many deals with the devil that you can’t unmake.”
As for Wright Thompson, the author said life is good. The 42-year-old now makes his home in Oxford where he lives with his wife, Sonia, and daughter, Wallace, and often makes trips home to Clarksdale to see his mother and friends.
“Everybody has a story they tell themselves about themselves. And everybody has a story that other people tell about them,” Thompson said. “What I really want to do when you break it down… the essence of it… is to figure out what those two stories are… and the most important is figure out what is the space in between, why does that space exist.”
As an example, he said he’ll often tell people that he grew up “working on a farm” from his days spent working in the cotton fields for local farmer Cliff Heaton. But what he’ll not say is that his father “was a pretty successful trial lawyer.”
Thompson said, “It’s because I have a self-image of myself as someone who got here by working really hard and one thing confirms the way I feel about it and the other thing doesn’t. Am I lying? I don’t know. But it feels true to me.
“When I look at and see my own journey here, and all the people who started wanting the same thing… and watching the winnowing happen and seeing who gets stripped away and who is left standing when we get to the top of the mountain… it feels to me, the single most important thing was not talent, but hard work and the ability to believe ‘someone’s got to do this, why not me?’”
(This story originally appeared in the April 10, 2019, edition of The Clarksdale Press Register.)
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It was on that dark stretch of rural road, hemmed in between stands
of towering oaks and deserted railroad cars between Clarksdale and Lyon
where I came upon him one recent Tuesday evening.
Driving home
near midnight I was the lone vehicle along that stretch of road when I
noticed a faint figure ahead of the beam of my headlights. Downshifting,
I slowed my pickup until I came to a dead stop and shifted forward in
my seat, hands and chin on my steering wheel, staring straight ahead.
He didn’t budge from the center of the roadway. Not a flick of a muscle.
Caught there in the glare of my beams he stared right back into my eyes. I clicked my lights, thinking that might scare him off.
No chance. It was as if we were in a stand-off.
I
couldn’t tell if he was, quite literally, caught like a deer in
headlights. Or rather, he was in some indirect manner telling me this
was his turf and I was the intruder.
He was a rather scrawny fox.
Kind of beat-up around the edges. Looked a bit older and it’d been a
while since he’d had a decent meal.
We continued our staredown for
a few more seconds until he glanced around and slowly strolled off to
the side. I put my truck in gear and resumed my drive home.
I’ve thought often about that fox over the past few weeks. And in some ways, he’s sort of become symbolic of life now.
Earlier
this month, me and my wife were faced with one of life’s decisions. An
opportunity to return to the Carolinas, closer to family, beckoned. But
it wasn’t an easy decision as we had made several new friends in our 13
months here and we believed good work was being done at The Clarksdale
Press Register.
Yet, in the end, the lure of home won out as this is my final column as the publisher/editor of The Clarksdale Press Register. Just as my nocturnal neighbor was faced with that decision to stay or flee, we too opted to turn for home.
And, in my opinion, that fox caught in the headlights is also symbolic of current-day Clarksdale and Coahoma County.
It seems as if this community is torn right now on which direction to head in regard to so many heady issues it faces.
There
are some ready to jump ahead and embrace all new things. Yet, there are
others who are proud of the traditions and success of yesteryear and
have a reluctance to deviate from what’s worked in the past. And,
unfortunately, there are a good number of folks who really don’t care
either way.
Oftentimes, when sides are pulling from opposite ends,
you are left with a stalemate. You end up with inaction — that
deer-in-the-headlights look as the future steadily bears down upon you.
And Clarksdale and Coahoma County cannot afford to stay frozen in place. To do so would be a failure.
Tough
questions need to be asked about education in this county. Why are the
three public school systems in the county failing? Are these schools
meant to educate or rather provide employment? Can consolidation happen?
Crime
continues to be at the forefront. It’s almost as if being broken into
or having some of your property taken from your car or shed is as
acceptable and as much a part of life here as having blues music 365
days a year. That needs to change.
There’s a shortage of available
middle-class housing. As renters, we moved four times in the 13 months
we were here. To find a good home where you don’t worry about being
broken into or being flooded is a real challenge. And as this community
continues to bring in new industry – and with it middle-class renters –
there should be a concerted effort to make that a priority.
Take
these challenges to heart, but also know there are so many good memories
that fill my mind when I look back at the past 13 months. Things I will
truly miss.
The taste of the honey-hot sauce on Pete’s Wings. The
drawl and timbre of Charles Langford’s voice. The smile of Rena Butler.
The smooth as silk delivery of a Valmadge Towner speech. Hartley
Kittle’s comical comparisons. The awesome view of cypress trees rising
into a clear blue sky on a Moon Lake pontoon guided by John Mohead.
I’ll
miss Ed Seals’ monthly plea for city crews to plug those potholes in
his ward. And I still crave to have a bourbon in hand as I sit and
listen to Hank Burdine and Wright Thompson read their words. I’ll
cherish hearing the sounds of the Coahoma Community College choir and a
Sunday afternoon in a Mound Bayou church. I’ll miss Big A and Lucious
and LaLa.
I’ll never forget the sight of John Ruskey pedaling down
Yazoo, that hair and hat flapping in the wind. The weekly emails of
encouragement and that living wall of musical history that is all Panny
Mayfield.
Who couldn’t help but smile as they watched a gassed
Clarksdale mayor Chuck Espy pull along a 180-pound dummy, only to
collapse at the finish?
And who couldn’t help but to be overcome
with dread and helplessness, watching as coaches pounded on the chest of
a high school football player on a Friday night sideline, trying to
ensure life was not lost.
It’s the candor of Bo Plunk. The
diplomacy of Jon Levingston. The desire to do good by Christine
McDaniel. And the friendship of Jerry Gardner and Travis Haggan. It’s
the honesty of Paul Pearson. And the helpfulness of Demetria Jackson.
It’s life here in Clarksdale and Coahoma County.
On several occasions this year, I heard Mayor Espy quote actor Morgan Freeman from the movie “Shawshank Redemption” when saying: “It’s time to get busy living or get busy dying. And I choose to get busy living.”
Do that, Clarksdale and Coahoma County.
Get busy living.
(This article first appeared in the April 23, 2019, edition of The Clarksdale Press Register.)
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