Program Success August 2009 | Page 5

PROGRAM SUCCESS – AUGUST 2009 PAGE 5 New Book Focuses On Lynching Eeny Miney Mo / Time To Lynch A Negro A heartfelt new book by author and poet, Eddie Bell, Eeny Meeny Miney Mo / Time to Lynch a Negro was released January 2009 by Royal Fireworks Press. This daring work, Eddie’s third, is a fictional depiction of stories surrounding lynching and its impact on the folks left behind. It offers an insiders look at a hidden American story. “The fact that lynching is not talked about by blacks or whites, in the same manner as the Jewish media discourse on the Holocaust, is all the more reason for writing the book,” the author explains. have not shied away from the personal passions and real consequences that always accompany these desperate acts of hate and retribution.” Eddie Bell recently completed a successful debut book tour that took him to Durham, NC, Alexander City, AL, Summerfield, Tampa, and Detroit, MI. He reads his work widely Book Cover throughout New York and across the country and has toured in France on three occasions. Collateral Damage: A Soliloquy is a wife’s lament about her “missin man” and Aftermath of the Bad Nigger Festival: An Old Woman’s Story tells of long-held memories of a white woman, in advanced age, taken to a spectacle lynching by her father when she was a little girl. Spectacle lynchings were those that were advertised and drew large crowds of onlookers. A Prayer for Reuben is an old time prayer by a father asking forgiveness for the mob that lynched his son. Other poems are equally compelling. I asked the author to provide the background for the writing of Eeny Meeny Miney Mo / Time to Lynch a Negro and the following article is his response. Darryl A. Barrs, Program Success Editor The idea for Eeny Meeny Miney Mo / Time to Lynch a Negro has its origins with a casual suggestion by a fellow writer. Knowing that I was a photographer, he opined that a photo essay depicting lynching sites in their present day environment would be an interesting project. The idea intrigued me, but it didn’t take me long to realize that this was an improbable task. The sites are so numerous and so widespread that it would take a lifetime to complete such a project. My book, which is comprised of short stories and poetry, is not so much about the act of lynching, but more about the people affected: mothers, wives, people in the crowd. In my introduction I write, “In order to spare the sensitivities of the reader I have refrained from dwelling too heavily on lynching’s grotesque, inhumane acts of torture and death, but I see the writing of Eeny Meeny miney Mo as giving voice to those forgotten people who Eddie Bell suffered the effects of mob violence and have been ignored by history. The poetry mainly speaks in women’s voices as they convey deeply felt emotions in a very personal fashion. The short stories characterize fictional people that experienced lynching up close. One story tells of a tragedy that stemmed from a school romance between a black boy and white girl. Another tells of a woman whose husband was lynched and her entanglement with a drunken suitor. And still another tells of a revenge lynching by a black man who became a mute after being confronted by a scene that he witnessed as a young boy. CD Cover Selected poems from the book have been produced in a compact disc entitled, “Festival of Tears.” My reading (and that of two guest readers) is accompanied by accomplished musicians rendering blues, jazz and spiritual interpretations on violin, piano and bass. Pianist Peter Tomlinson, who has See Lynching Page 8