Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

What They Said…

Greg Cravens

About Frank Murtaugh’s Sports column and Richard Alley’s Books column …

I really enjoyed the “Heroes Return” story by Frank Murtaugh and “Good Friends” by Richard J. Alley. Great writing that struck a chord with me this holiday season. Thanks for all the great articles, all year long. Happy holidays.

Elizabeth M

About Ted Rall’s Viewpoint column, “Bern Unit” …

Ted Rall’s hilarious screed about socialism and American ignorance was almost as entertaining as it was uninformative. Rall is appalled by “political ignoramuses” and wonders whether we “idiots” are “qualified to vote at all.” He’s upset that even Democrats are too stupid to understand the socialist “tradition of Western European electoral politics,” much less the Republican right, which is plagued by “colossal dumbness.”

It must be sorely difficult to be so doggone educated, intelligent, and right when so many people are uneducated and just plain stupid. Perhaps Bernie Sanders should belittle Americans for their ignorance of “basic political and economic terms.” That’ll win over a bunch of swing voters!

It seems pretty obvious that Rall isn’t interested in democracy, socialism, or even communism at all. What he wants is a type of fascist totalitarianism in which he and a few other “well educated elites” get to tell everyone what to do, how to act, and, most importantly, what’s “good for them.”

You can always count on a leftist to reveal his or her true intentions when it comes to governance and public policy. To paraphrase Madge the manicurist: What’s that smell? You’re sitting in it, Mr. Rall!

Greg McIntyre

About Kevin Lipe’s post, “Grizzlies 112, Wizards 96: Five Thoughts” …

I love the Grizzlies, but I really think age has caught up with us. We aren’t the defensive team we once were, and Allen looks disgruntled. I think Z-Bo can be really effective off the bench, playing 25 minutes a night, but the question is how long will he settle for coming off the bench. Gasol has had his moments, but the consistency has not been there, and Conley has not been as good this year.

We have to beat a quality opponent with their full lineup intact, and we don’t look like we can do that.

Ray

About Bruce VanWyngarden’s Letter From the Editor, “Wondering Where the Lions Are” …

The charter school industry is not unlike the for-profit prison system, which requires a steady influx of money, er, prisoners, and so laws are written to keep the prisons full. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if the same gangs don’t run both operations.

Jeff

About the GOP debate …

The men and the woman vying for the GOP presidential nomination want us to believe that America under President Obama is the ultimate wimp nation; that when it comes to the Islamic State, we’re busy zoning out on Netflix and letting ISIS run rampant. The way Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, and their minions put it, you’d think the Obama administration is doing nothing.

Turns out, the United States is dumping tens of thousands of bombs on Islamic State strongholds, so much so, the U.S. has been running out of bombs. Since the air war kicked off last year, we’ve unloaded more bombs on ISIS than we have in Afghanistan any time during the past five years. In fact, when it comes to ISIS, we’ve averaged more than 2,000 air raids a month since the military mission began. We’re spending some $10 million every day bombing the Islamic State. So far we’ve spent more than $4 billion!

And it’s gotten us nowhere. Just like increased military action and Ted Cruz’s “carpet bombing” will get us nowhere. So, when you hear the Republican warmongers and know-nothings pop off, be happy President Obama is living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue and taking care of business.

Arthur Lewis

Categories
Book Features Books

Blue Notes

Jazz lover Richard J. Alley doesn’t play jazz himself, but Oliver Pleasant and Agnes Cassady do. And both of them are star players in Alley’s new novel, Five Night Stand (Lake Union Publishing).

Alley isn’t a laid-off Memphis newspaperman either, but Frank Severs is. And in Five Night Stand, Severs is in New York City the week that Pleasant is playing in the basement club of a Manhattan hotel. It’s a farewell gig before the aged Pleasant — who grew up in segregated, small-town Mississippi and who went on to become a world-class jazz pianist — moves to Memphis to live out his days with his sister and niece.

Cassady — a 22-year-old white jazz pianist from Memphis now playing clubs in New Orleans — is in New York too. She’s there to see about the medical condition that is threatening her career, but she’s taking in Pleasant’s five-night stand as well. Severs, a 41-year-old struggling freelancer, is on hand too to interview Pleasant for a future article, but he’s struggling with the tensions inside his marriage back home in Memphis and with his own deferred dreams of being a novelist.

That’s a very brief summary of Alley’s ambitious debut novel — one that follows the complicated lives and troubled back stories of its three lead characters — but this isn’t his first novel. It’s his third (the first two are unpublished), and it draws on the author’s knowledge of jazz, his Memphis roots, and his career in journalism. A former freelance columnist for The Commercial Appeal, Alley is now editor of Inside Memphis Business and a contributing writer at Memphis magazine, both of them sister publications of The Memphis Flyer.

In a recent interview with Alley, the topic wasn’t journalism, however. It was the road to publication. After failing at finding an agent and publisher, in 2014, Alley entered Five Night Stand in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel competition, where it reached the semifinal round. (From 2,000 submissions down to 100 in Alley’s genre.) When Five Night Stand didn’t make it to the next round, Alley admitted to thinking: “Maybe that’s it. What’s next? What do I do?”

An acquisitions editor at Amazon Publishing knew what to do. According to Alley, “She picked up the manuscript, started reading it, got sucked in, took it to her people, made the offer to publish, and here we are.”

But that’s not where Five Night Stand once stood. It began as a short story featuring only Pleasant and Cassady — a story that, once written, went back into Alley’s desk drawer. When he reread it, he realized that the story was really a long outline to a more fully developed story. It could be fleshed out to make a novel. The five days and nights that the story covers: The structure for a novel was there. Alley wrote in other, minor characters. He wrote in another, major character: Frank Severs. But if you think Severs is a stand-in for the author, Alley never saw him that way. Their circumstances are too dissimilar. One thing they do share, however: journalist turned fiction writer.

Alley as a fiction writer proved his talent by winning Memphis magazine’s annual fiction contest in 2011. But he’s been penning short stories since he was in his late teens. He’d just never “focused on it, never thought of it as something you really worked toward.” Nor had Alley stopped to think of himself as a fiction writer in the company of other writers. Novelist and short-story writer Richard Bausch saw to that in the creative writing workshop he led in 2010, when he was teaching at the University of Memphis.

“Bausch doesn’t give much advice as far as the nuts and bolts of structuring a story or even how to go about getting published,” Alley said of the workshop. “What he did do was to treat us all as equals. He called us ‘writers,’ and that was huge for me. I was freelance writing at that point and had just won the Memphis fiction contest, but it was still hard for me to refer to myself as a writer. Bausch made it okay. He made me see that there is value in the process regardless of the end product and whether or not it was published. That was the boost I needed just when I needed it.”

It’s the very same boost novelist Frank Severs needs — and that Oliver Pleasant gives him — in the life-changing, closing pages of Five Night Stand.

Categories
News News Blog

MBQ Relaunches as Inside Memphis Business

Contemporary Media Inc., publisher of Memphis, The Memphis Flyer, and Memphis Parent, has announced that, beginning with the February/March 2015 issue, MBQ: Inside Memphis Business will carry a new, streamlined name — Inside Memphis Business.

The regional business-to-business publication, originally launched in 2006, has gone through an evolution over the past decade, beginning life as Memphis Business Quarterly before going to its current publication schedule of six times a year in 2012. “The new name evokes a new outlook,” says Richard Alley, editor of Inside Memphis Business. “We’re looking to be more engaged with the business community of Memphis and to bring its leaders and experts in on the discussion. Conversely, we’ll be taking a closer look at those industries and their leaders, getting inside to tell their stories, spotlight best practices, and learn what it is that makes them tick.”

The magazine will also work more closely with area nonprofits and the world of philanthropy. Along with the name change and redesign of the layout in the February/March issue, the magazine has unveiled its “Dig Deep for Memphis” campaign, working with local nonprofits and the companies that support them to raise awareness for both.

The newest issue of Inside Memphis Business features its annual CEO of the Year Awards, highlighting leadership in four categories based on employee numbers, as well as an in-depth story on the current state of Memphis International Airport and the Memphis-Shelby County Airport Authority. New departments include snapshot views of various industries including sports, law, tourism, dining, and higher education. Columnists featured are David S. Waddell of Waddell & Associates, John Malmo of archer>malmo, and Douglas Scarboro with the Office of Talent and Human Capital for the city of Memphis.

Categories
News News Blog

Seeking Nominations for 20<30 for 2015

The Flyer is now accepting nominations for the 2015 class of 20<30. Nominations are open for anyone who will be under 30 until Jan. 1 2015.

We’re looking for creative and interesting young men and women who are making a difference in Memphis. They can include entrepreneurs, artists, musicians, sports figures, social activists, non-profit types, business people, etc. Self-nominations are acceptable. Nominees must be under 30 years of age until January 1, 2015 and must commit to participating in a cover photo shoot in early January, 2015.

Send nominations and a resume and/or qualifications letter to Richard Alley: richard@memphisflyer.com