Author Archive for Kurt Thometz

15
Feb
09

Onitsha Market Lit at Swann

 

 
Sale 2171 Lot 107(AFRICA.) LUMUMBA, PATRICE. The Last Days of Lumumba * The Sorrows of Lumumba. Two volumes, 8vo, original pictorial wrappers; covers faded, poor quality paper toned; ownership signature and the numerals “I” and “II” on the covers. Onitsha, Nigeria, circa 1961-1962 
Estimate $250-350 

first editions. scarce. OCLC locates four copies of the first title and only one of the second title. Patrice Lumumba (1925-1961), pan-Africanist, rebel leader and first freely elected leader of the Congo was a postal clerk and traveling beer salesman, until being caught up in the general African national movement of the mid 1950s. He rose through the MNC, or Mouvement National Congolais, to be its leader. Elected president in 1960, he was in power less than a year before being forced out of office, arrested and subsequently assassinated while in the custody of Katangan forces, backed by Belgium and the CIA. Lumumba was an inspiration to Africans still under the yoke of colonialism, as well as to the nascent Black Radical movements in the United States and West Indies.

 On Thursday, February 26th at 10:30 a.m. Swann Gallery will be featuring two examples of the Onitsha Market Literature Life Turns Man Up and Down is about.  This is the first auction in many years African street lit in years and we’ll be following the sale with great interest.

17
Jul
08

Across 160th Street

 

 

 

06
Jul
08

The Private Library

In 2002 Bravo’s Arts and Minds shot this piece on my career as a private librarian.  The channel, then devoted to the arts, was purchased by NBC and remodeled into a vehicle for Reality based TV – Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, Project Runway – and never showed in the US. 

 

My family and I have since moved from Brooklyn Heights to Sugar Hill in Washington Heights/Harlem, where in 2005 I opened Jumel Terrace Books.  The out-of-print and rare shop specializes in local history: African and American. 

 The Private Library is now in its 28th year providing services to Bibliophiles: cataloguing, bibliography, appraisals, archival services, organization, moving, book searches and research.  We specialize in made-to-order and custom made libraries on all subjects. 

 

 

 

01
May
07

Recent Acquisitions

Some of you might remember autodidact/bibliophile Earl Hadley’s AfroAmerican Bookshop (1972-1985) on 145th. Herb Boyd recalls that when ConEd turned the electric off on Mr. Hadley, he lit the place with candles. A good selection from his shop is now at Jumel Terrace Books, where we keep the flame burning. This is just a small sample.

Muhammad Speaks.

Muhammad Speaks. (Chicago: September 25, 1964 thru September 20th, 1968. 4 large folios, Vols. 4, 5, 6, 7. Extremely scarce. Library bound by Books and Things, New York. Extraordinary. Enquire for price.

a-new-negro.jpgWashington, Booker T. A New Negro for a New Century. (Chicago: American Publishing House, 1900) Very Good. No Jacket. First edition, early printing. Includes sections written by N.B. Wood and Fannie Barrier Williams. Eighteen chapters on notable African Americans of the Victorian era, including writers, soldiers, lawyers, politicians, doctors and society people, with portraits of the subjects. Green diagonal-fine-rib-grain cloth with gold, red, and blue stamping. Photo portrait of Washington in white paper onlay printed in brown ink on front. Gold stamping to spine. No decoration on back. Green endpapers. No DJ. Very good with some rubbing to gilt decoration, binding loosening but intact. Text block clean and near fine with some minor aging to paper. 428 pp. $350.00

African ZionHeldman, Marilyn with Stuart C. Munro-Hay. African Zion: The Sacred Art of Ethiopia. (New Haven/London: Yale University Press, 1993) Wraps. Very good +. A well illustrated monograph on the Eastern Coptic Christian tradition of Ethiopia. $200.00

Black FireJones, LeRoi & Larry Neal, eds. Black Fire: An Anthology of Afro-American Writing. (New York: William Morrow, 1968.) Second Printing. Signed by Larry Neal.
1 ½” closed tear to dj, chipping to top of spine, otherwise very good. $170.00

Harlem Book of the DeadVan der Zee, James, Owen Dodson, Camille Billops with a forward by Toni Morrison. The Harlem Book of the Dead. (Dobbs Ferry, NY: Morgan & Morgan, 1978) First printing, First edition. Signed by Camille Billops. Cloth/dj. Chips to dj, small closed tears, minor soiling. Scarce. $350.00

NkrumahNkrumah, Kwame. The Axioms of Kwame Nkrumah. (London: Nelson, 1967) First edition. Cloth/dj. Small chipping and closed tears to dj, otherwise very good. $45.00

dr. benBen-Jochannan, Yosef. African Origins of the Major “Western Religions.” (New York: Alkebu-Lan Books, 1970.) Wraps, minor soiling, otherwise very good. $85.00

Other titles include Dr. Ben’s Black Men of the Nile, Malcolm X Speaks, Basil Davidson’s biography of Kwame Nkrumah Black Star, Harold Courlander’s Tales of Yoruba Gods and Heros, Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth and Black Skin, White Masks, and ornitologist R.W. Shufeldt’s scurrilous The Negro: A Menace to American Civilization, 1907.

11
Apr
07

Wintley Phipps on “Amazing Grace”

01
Mar
07

Leon Eyrie, the Collector, and his Birds

Lauren Bilanko shot a portfolio of photographs, a picture play, on the hottest day of last summer’s early August heat wave here at the house. I was recruited to pose as the effete elite collector. She’s wisely obscured me – for I’m looking rather Monty Wooley in a George Sanders role – as the focus is on the muse.

I am no more accustomed to seeing my muse than you are but Lauren’s shown it to me as in a symbolist fever dream. In one of the photos, titled Duality and Death, Indira’s perfectly poised freak Wodaabe chic is just out and there I am with my hands out. My Phoenix arises from the ashes in that dynamite picture of the piano and takes flight in the back yard. As the young people say, nowadays, It’s all about the Holy Ghost.

22
Feb
07

Robert Farris Thompson on Julie Dash’s Daughters of the Dust


Highlights from an enlightening talk Bob gave recently at the Brooklyn Public Library. Watch this space for our announcement of his forthcoming visit to Jumel Terrace Books, when Bobito will represent the Mambo in New York in his own inimitable style. Wear your dancing shoes.

22
Feb
07

Life Turns Man Up and Down: Highlife, Useful Advice and Mad English

cover2.jpegLife Turns Man Up and Down is a rare window into understanding modern African history, from the point of view of average people living during a time of rapid social change. It is a snapshot of the transformation of African cities, and African literature, and as such, the book is a treasure.
Africana.com, Tanu T. Henry

Of course, no book this fall is as unexpected, or as unexpectedly delightful, as Life Turns Man Up and Down (Pantheon), a sampler of African market literature selected by Kurt Thometz.
L.A. Times. David L. Ulin. Between the Covers.
Fall Books Offer Compelling Works of Emotional Depth. Sept. 12, 2001

This anthology, “Life Turns Man Up and Down: High Life, Useful Advice and Mad English,” displays these often funny and always fascinating artifacts — sexy stories like “Why Harlots Hate Married Men and Love Bachelors” and “Why I Killed My White Lover” to more contemplative offerings like “Sayings of the Wise” and a play called “The Statements of Hitler Before the World War.” These chapbooks have the spirit of creativity, exuberance and adventure of a popular forum that offered an exchange of ideas and desires for every man.
Salon.com Sept. 20, 2001

It’s worth noting that the booklets are wonderfully reproduced in the original typefaces and with the occasional illustration intact. More than that, however, the paper has the appearance and color of vintage newsprint, making it the most aesthetically pleasing book to come out of a major publishing house in a long time. As a physical object, it is a joy to read. Thometz’s book isn’t the first such collection of market literature to appear upon our shores, but it is a welcome insight into this underappreciated written tradition and it provides a wonderful insight into the commingling of culture and technology.
Phildelphia City Paper. book quarterly.
The World Writ Small: Little books mean a lot in Life Turns Man Up and Down.
Andrew Ervin. September 27-October 4, 2001.

Documenting the adaptation of an oral culture to literacy and modernization, these stories, moral guides, and how-to manuals were both lively and confusing, written in an exuberant pidgin called Mad English and littered with felicitous nonsense.
The New Yorker. Briefly Noted. Oct. 8, 2001.

The book is a riot of poetry that’s as sublime as it is often accidental. Befitting the work of a rare bookman, Life Turns Man Up and Down is as fun to hold as it is to read. At Thometz’s insistence, it evokes and reproduces the look and even a bit of the feel of the original pamphlets, the jumbled typefaces and darling illustrations and off-color paper stock. It’s a beautiful production.
New York Press, Publishing.
John Strausbaugh. High Life & Mad English. Nov. 28, 2001.

“Their literature is one of the rare occasions where the introduction of the Word to a primarily oral society is laid bare in print,” private librarian Kurt Thometz, who selected the entries, writes in a fascinating essay. What’s more, Life Turns Man Up and Down is the most beautifully designed book of the year.
The Austin Chronicle 12.21.01

This anthology of Nigerian “market literature” — pulp pamphlets, now collectors’ items, that were sold in open-air markets until the 1960′s — is a wild excursion into the collective unconscious of an emerging nation.
New York Times. Books in Brief: Life Turns Man Up and Down. Eric P. Nash. 12.30.01.

The first thing you’ll notice when you pick up this collection of 1960s African market literature from the eastern Nigerian town of Onitsha is that it’s a virtual riot: the outlandish, overgrown, even incomprehensible language (dubbed “Mad English” or “Young English”); the bizarre cover art and fractured typography (replicated here in irresistible facsimiles); the hodgepodge of literary genres and styles (from romance and adventure to moral instruction); the bold pen names of authors like Okenwa Olisah (a/k/a “Your Popular Author, The Strong Man of the Pen” and “Master of the Universe”), or C.N.O. Moneyhard, or the writer simply known as Speedy Eric.
Village Voice. Riot Lit. Anderson Tepper. Jan. 2-8, 2002.




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