The ebook is a celebration of areas, previous and current, the place Black mind, activism and group flourish.
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Within the phrases of Toni Morrison: “If there’s a ebook that you simply need to learn, nevertheless it hasn’t been written but, then you could write it.”
Moved by Morrison’s knowledge, shocked by the absence of a complete historical past of Black bookstores and ennobled with a foreword by the Nikki Giovanni, Katie Mitchell poured her coronary heart — and her experience within the Black literature canon — into Prose to the Individuals: A Celebration of Black Bookstores.
“Black bookstores are as transformative as Black church buildings and Black faculties, however I noticed that they had been understudied,” Mitchell mentioned. “I believed it was very ironic that the story of Black bookstores hadn’t been advised in ebook kind.”

Greater than only a retelling of historical past, although, Prose to the Individuals is a hymn for the shops as anchors of Black tradition and a love letter to its individuals. It’s an elegy for closed-down outlets and store house owners now within the ancestral airplane and a testomony to cultural endurance, as youthful generations now embrace bookstores in their very own methods.
The wondrous assortment of poems, essays, interviews, newspaper clippings, public data and collages of images and ephemera mimics a go to to a Black bookstore, Mitchell mentioned.
“Whenever you step right into a bookstore, there are a number of authors, a number of genres. It’s colourful. You see paintings. You see the ebook covers,” she mentioned. “I needed to be very immersive. I needed to move the reader to those shops, and, for those that also exist, possibly encourage individuals to go once they’re in that space.”
Prose to the Individuals is organized by area, spotlighting shops, house owners, patrons and famend guests in “the Northeast,” “the DMV” (D.C., Maryland, Virginia), “the South,” “the Midwest” and “the West,” the place Marcus Books, the nation’s oldest unbiased Black bookstore, resides in Oakland.
It’s no shock that Atlanta performs a particular position in such a historical past.
“Atlanta was what individuals had been attempting to emulate,” Mitchell mentioned throughout a latest speak concerning the ebook on the Atlanta Historical past Heart. The occasion was moderated by writer and Clark Atlanta College professor Daniel Black.
Mitchell shared one story of Emma Rogers, who owned E-book Bazaar in Dallas. It was the most important Black bookstore within the U.S. for 30 years, she mentioned. However to get began, Rogers took her cue from the Black bookstores throughout Atlanta.
“I feel that’s actually indicative of Atlanta’s place within the tradition — ‘Atlanta influences all the things’ actually means all the things. I see [the network of bookstores] as an enormous Black household tree and Atlanta, in quite a lot of methods, is the foundation.”
The South chapter options bookstores in New Orleans; Houston; Little Rock; Jackson, Mississippi; Raleigh, North Carolina; and different cities. Profiles from Atlanta embrace Nia Damali’s Medu Bookstore in Greenbriar Mall; The Shrine of the Black Madonna Cultural Heart and Bookstore; Cheryl and Warren Lee’s forty fourth & third Booksellers (each within the West Finish); Rosa Duffy’s For Retains Books in Candy Auburn; and acclaimed photographer Jim Alexander’s First World Bookstores, which grew into 4 areas from 1988 to 1994.

Aminika Convington, supervisor at The Shrine, which is celebrating 50 years, mentioned Prose to the Individuals “means we’re seen and acknowledged for the position that we play in our group. It’s particular to be a part of this story — a part of a motion.”
Whereas the ebook is a sprawling historical past, it additionally includes a listing for additional exploration of bookstores that aren’t individually profiled and the place to seek out them.
Past being merely Black-owned, Black bookstores distinctively middle Black authors and themes and are sometimes protected havens for Black gatherings, activism, organizing and assets. So when many began seeing decline — from big-box shops and the digital eclipse to rising prices of operating and housing a enterprise — the loss was profound. Some added espresso and pastries or different retail. Some used their very own cash from different jobs to fill the voids. Some merely couldn’t survive the altering world.
However Mitchell’s use of essays, particularly curated poetry and one-on-one interviews ensures that these tales should not misplaced.
“I needed to incorporate group members who’ve their very own relationships with Black bookstores — to faucet into their lived experiences and allow them to fill out the ebook in a method that I do know I couldn’t do alone,” she mentioned.
In nearly each bookstore Mitchell visited, shining tales about Giovanni, from the Black Arts Motion period to her dying in December, got here up.
“I noticed that sample repeatedly, so I knew she deserved to have the primary phrase within the first ebook about Black bookstores,” Mitchell mentioned. “I solely knew her as a fan of her work, not a private relationship, however when she accepted my proposal, she was so gracious and was thanking me for being part of this undertaking. It actually confirmed me what it means to be an excellent elder — to achieve again and provides again to individuals who look as much as you.”
That form of communion is a defining attribute of the bookstores.
“Black bookstores are run by Black individuals, and what do Black individuals do?” Mitchell mentioned. “We feed one another. We educate one another. We watch the infants for one another. We ship care packages. We give an excellent phrase [of prayer] like The Shrine did for me.”
And Black bookstores are a blueprint for moments of political turmoil.
Harassment by violent white mobs and arson stretch again to an abolitionist David Ruggles bookstore within the 1830s, and the FBI’s COINTELPRO surveillance and different permutations got here later, as detailed within the ebook. Amid the continuing stifling of Black voices, banning of books in colleges and the rampant erasure of cultural histories by the identical authoritarian forces that outlawed studying for the enslaved, the marginalized can look to Black bookstores for solutions.

“We see this regression, this animosity towards Black individuals and our literature, or simply Black thought on the whole, however we’ve been right here earlier than, sadly,” Mitchell mentioned. “Within the pages of Prose, there are classes that our elders and ancestors have given us on how to reply to what’s happening proper now.”
Black books are a foundational a part of Mitchell’s life blueprint as properly. Her love for them was nurtured by her mom, Katherine, whose elegant handwriting is used within the dedication and as pull quotes all through the pages.
As a baby, Mitchell was spared from doing chores at house. Her essential activity, in addition to her brother’s, was studying and sometimes reciting poetry by the likes of Giovanni and Langston Hughes. The ebook’s title is a callback to Hughes’ “poetry to the individuals” philosophy of writing to and about on a regular basis Black people and sometimes performing free of charge.
Mitchell treasures rising up in a “two-person ebook membership,” together with her mom, which in 2019 grew into their three way partnership, Good Books. The web bookstore options principally classic Black books and hosts pop-ups across the metropolis.
“We’re attempting to get individuals again to that love of studying that they might have misplaced or introduce individuals to authors and books they aren’t aware of,” Mitchell mentioned. “We are saying all Black books are good books, in order that’s the standards. And the Black expertise is so assorted that there’s one thing for everyone.”
Mitchell jokes that she was so enamored with Black literature, she thought Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison — her mom’s favourite writer — had been her aunties. Mitchell was a baby in a time when literary depictions of Black youngsters had been turning into extra frequent.
“She may see herself in these books and she or he thrived from there,” Katherine Mitchell mentioned. “This offers seeing herself [in a book] a brand new which means. I understand how a lot work she put into it, and I’m so happy with her.”
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Angela Oliver is a proud native of outdated Atlanta who grew up within the West Finish. A Western Kentucky College journalism and Black research grad, every day information survivor and member of Delta Sigma Theta, she works within the grassroots nonprofit world whereas daydreaming about seeing her scripts come alive on the massive display screen.