Monday, January 8, 2024

TBR: The Garretts of Columbia: A Black South Carolina Family from Slavery to the Dawn of Integration by David Nicholson

TBR [to be read] is a semi-regular, invitation-only interview series with authors of newly released/forthcoming, interesting books who will tell us about their new work as well as offer tips on writing, stories about the publishing biz, and from time to time, a recipe. 



Give us your elevator pitch: what’s your book about in 2-3 sentences?

 

The Garretts of Columbia is a warts-and-all family history that begins with an African who bought his freedom in 1819 and continues with the stories of my great-grandfather and his family. “Papa,” as I call him in the book, was a lawyer, newspaper editor, and teacher. Oft-sued for libel, he was a quixotic idealist once dubbed black South Carolina’s “most respected disliked man.”

 

What boundaries did you break in the writing of this memoir? Where does that sort of courage come from?

 

The introduction, titled “Confessions of a Weary Integrationist” is as close to memoir as “The Garretts of Columbia” gets. That said, I often tell the reader what people in the book thought or felt, so there’s a fair amount of imagination and interpretation. If I broke any boundaries, it was in recounting family stories told at the holiday table when certain older relatives were a little tipsy.

 

Courage? Nah. I waited till anyone who might complain was gone.

 

Tell us a bit about the highs and lows of your book’s road to publication.

 

Publication was relatively easy: The first university press I sent it to accepted it. But “The Garretts of Columbia” was decades in the making. Sometimes I thought I’d never finish. I spent time in many archives and countless hours online, grateful that so much had been digitized. At one point, the MS was more than 200,000 words—much too long! Part of it’s now another book that begins with my grandparents’ courtship and their move to Washington, D.C., as part of the Great Migration.

 

What’s your favorite piece of writing advice?

 

Must I choose one? The bulletin board above my writing desk is feathered with index cards and scrawled notes. Flannery O’Connor said, “You can do anything you can get away with, but nobody has ever gotten away with much.” Edgar Allen Poe said, essentially, make every word count. And Katherine Anne Porter and Miles Davis gave me hope. She assured me that, while writing can’t be taught, it can be learned. And he said, “Man, sometimes it takes you a long time to sound like yourself.”

 

 

My favorite writing advice is “write until something surprises you.” What surprised you in the writing of this book?

 

Sometimes the insights I came to, such as the notion that my great-grandparents were Black Victorians. Sometimes what I discovered about them. Papa, my great-grandfather, was a pugnacious sort—he was twice attacked on the street because of his editorials, and he once punched an AME bishop during a dispute! Some sources say he was the first person sued after South Carolina revised its libel laws. Not surprisingly, he was fired from his teaching job and his wife—I call her Mama in the book—had to go to work. She became supervisor of her county’s rural colored schools (as they were called then), driving from hamlet to hamlet to evaluate teachers, conduct literacy drives, teach home ec to farm wives, and oversee the construction of schoolhouses. At age 51, she learned to drive, braving narrow, rutted roads in a Ford “touring car” because she had so many schools to visit.

 

And their children: One wrote a musical with Langston Hughes in the 1920s. (It was never produced.) Another taught for nearly two years in Haiti during World War II.

 

 

What’s something about your book that you want readers to know?

 

This is a book about men and women who believed in the possibility of America, even when America did not believe in them.

 

Inquiring foodies and hungry book clubs want to know: Any food/s associated with your book?

 

Apart from a description of two Thanksgiving dinners early in the book, there’s no food to be found. Sorry!

 

*****

 

READ MORE ABOUT THIS AUTHOR: www.davidnicholson.info

  

READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK: https://uscpress.com/The-Garretts-of-Columbia

  

ORDER THIS BOOK FOR YOUR OWN TBR STACK: https://www.politics-prose.com/online-ordering OR https://www.sankofa.com

 

Work-in-Progress

DC-area author Leslie Pietrzyk explores the creative process and all things literary.