Bay Books Featured

February 4, 2010

Bay Books is featured in Country Roads (check out the picture!)

Carolyn Haines wins Harper Lee award

January 27, 2010

Carolyn Haines named 2010 Harper Lee Award recipient

Carolyn Haines of Semmes has been named the 2010 recipient of the Harper Lee Award for Alabama’s Distinguished Writer of the Year.  Haines will receive the award at the Alabama Writers Symposium in Monroeville on April 30 at the annual luncheon.  The conference will meet April 29-May 1.

The Alabama Writers’ Forum, a partnership program of the Alabama State Council on the Arts, coordinates the process to select the Harper Lee Award recipient annually from nominations from the field. The honor is presented annually by Alabama Southern Community College at the Symposium. It is made possible through a generous grant from George F. Landegger.

“We are delighted with the selection of Carolyn Haines for the 2010 Harper Lee Award,” said James A. Buford Jr., president of the Alabama Writers’ Forum Board of Directors. “On April 30, she will join twelve other distinguished writers whose contributions to the literary arts follow in the tradition of Harper Lee.”

“I’m deeply honored to be the recipient of the 2010 Harper Lee Award,” said Haines. “To Kill a Mockingbird had a tremendous impact on me as a young reader and helped shape my destiny to become a writer. Fine writing is part of the Alabama heritage, and I am proud to be included among the winners of this award, which bears the name of an author I so greatly admire.”

“Great congratulations to Carolyn Haines on being named the 2010 Harper Lee Award recipient, and on adding this wonderful award to her string of writing honors and accomplishments,” said Rick Bragg, last year’s recipient.  “The award was one of the nicer moments of my writing life, and I hope it is that for her as well.”

Haines is the author of ten books in the popular Sarah Booth Delaney Bones mystery series. Her latest, Bone Appétit, will be released in July by Minotaur Books.

She has received critical acclaim for her mystery series as well as for her stand-alone titles. Fever Moon, an historical thriller released in 2007, was a Book Sense notable book, and Penumbra, set in 1952 Mississippi, was named one of the top five mysteries of 2006 by Library Journal, a distinction given to Hallowed Bones in 2004.

Her first anthology of short fiction, Delta Blues, will be released by Tyrus Books on May 1. The book includes a foreword by Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman and short stories by some of the finest writers working today, including John Grisham, James Lee Burke, and Charlaine Harris. The stories focus on the Mississippi Delta blues, a unique musical form that originated in that region, and a crime or noir element.

Her first non-fiction book, My Mother’s Witness: The Peggy Morgan Story, tells the story of a woman who testified against Byron Dela Beckwith, a white supremacist who murdered civil rights worker Medgar Evers.

Along with Rebecca Barrett, Haines edited a collection of memories about Mobile author Eugene Walter, titled Moments with Eugene.  Touched and Summer of the Redeemers, two general fiction novels, have been reissued in trade paperback. Her books have been translated into more than a dozen languages.

She received a B.A. in journalism from the University of Southern Mississippi in 1974 and an M.A. in English from the University of South Alabama in 1985.

Haines, a native of Lucedale, Mississippi, makes her home in Semmes, Alabama. She teaches the graduate and undergraduate fiction writing classes at the University of South Alabama, where she is an assistant professor and Fiction Coordinator. An animal activist, she works to help educate the public about the need to spay and neuter pets.

Haines was in Bay St. Louis for Barktoberfest in October 2009 to support the Friends of the Animal Shelter in Hancock County.

Sillybandz now at Bay Books!

January 14, 2010

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Bay Books now has Sillybandz, the hot new collectible for kids. Collect and trade dozens of different styles and colors! $5.95 per package, available now at Bay Books.

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

February 18, 2009

Skeeter is twenty-one and has just graduated from Ole Miss. She’s returned home to Jackson in 1962 ready to fulfill the expectations of her life by marrying well and having a family. But things don’t go as planned.

The Help is told in three voices: Skeeter; Aibileen, an older black woman who has been taking care of white families since she was 13; and Minny, a younger black woman who finds it difficult not to speak her mind.

The novel opens with the event that opens Skeeter’s eyes to the injustice of a skewed system when a friend presents to their bridge group her plans for a “Home Help Sanitation Initiative”—building separate bathrooms for the black domestic workers in their homes. Skeeter may have had her consciousness raised, but it takes along while before she can treat Aibileen as a person, rather than a colored person. It also takes a long while for Aibileen to trust Skeeter.

In an afterword in the book Stockett quotes Pulitzer Prize winner Howell Raines, “There is no trickier subject for a writer from the South than that of the affection between a black person and a white one in the unequal world of segregation. For the dishonesty upon which a society is founded makes every emotion suspect, makes it impossible to know whether what flowed between two people was honest feeling or pity or pragmatism.”

Stockett continues, “I don’t presume to think that I know what it really felt like to be a black woman in Mississippi, especially in the 1960’s. I don’t think it is something any white woman on the other end of a black woman’s paycheck could ever truly understand. But trying to understand is vital to our humanity. In The Help there is
one line that I truly prize:

Wasn’t that the point of the book? For women to realize, We are just two people.
Not that much separates us. Not nearly as much as I’d thought. ”