Abstract

Before Hurricane Katrina in 2005 (we call it “The Storm” in New Orleans), I relished collecting manuscripts, books, and magazines. The historian/poet Julius E. Thompson and I joked about our passion for books, congratulating ourselves that between us we had at least eighty percent of the African American poetry broadsides, chapbooks, volumes, and anthologies published since 1960. We were assiduous in buying the output of Broadside, Third World, and Lotus Presses; in having complete collections of Negro Digest / Black World, OBSIDIAN, Sagala, American Rag, First World, Callaloo, Hoo-Doo, Drumvoices Revue, Umbra, and The Black Scholar; and in treasuring our autographed books by Margaret Walker, Richard A. Long, Haki Madhubuti, Angela Jackson, Mari Evans, Sterling A. Brown, Sonia Sanchez, Kalamu ya Salaam, Tom Dent, Kiarri T-H. Cheatwood, Sterling D. Plumpp, Lance Jeffers, Harryette Mullen, Audre Lorde, Jay Wright, Michael Harper, Julia Fields, Carolyn Rodgers, LeRoi Jones / Amiri Baraka, Pinkie Gordon Lane, Etheridge Knight, and such Mississippi writers as L. C. Dorsey, C. Leigh McInnis, Theodore Bozeman, Charlie Braxton, David Brian Williams, and Otis Williams. I tried to buy all the poetry, fiction, and nonfiction Ishmael Reed and Alice Walker published and all the recordings of Cassandra Wilson, Isaac Hayes, and Esther Phillips. Julius bought hundreds of books on African American and Southern history. The two of us were like kids in the candy factory with regard to all the reprints of black materials during the 1970s. Collecting was more than a simple matter of acquisition. It had practical uses. Having an extensive collection at hand made it easier to co-edit Black Southern Voices: An Anthology of Fiction, Poetry, Drama, Nonfiction, and Critical Essays (1992) with John Oliver Killens, to compile Trouble the Water: 250 Years of African American Poetry (1997), to write literary criticism, and to share insights about black literature and culture with my students at Tougaloo College and Dillard University. Julius used his collection to write important books on Dudley Randall and Broadside Press, lynching in Mississippi, and

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