I donโt know about you, but my TBR (โto be read,โ for those not keeping up with the lingo) list keeps on growing and growing and growing, and yet Iโm out here acting like I just donโt know what to read. Because I donโt. There are just too many choices. So, like any good journalist, I took advantage of my power, wielded my press badge (which doesnโt exist), and went to the source (Memphisโ booksellers) to ask the age-old question, โWhat should I read?โ, and have someone else make the choice for me. Itโs important work, I know. And I donโt do it just for me. I do it for the people. For you.
Jasmine Settles, owner of Cafe Noir, whose brick and mortar is slated to open at the end of this month, has two suggestions for me โ I mean, us โ The Mayor of Maxwell Street by Avery Cunningham and Tenderheaded by Olatunde Osinaike. Of Tenderheaded, she says, โThat was actually selected as a winner of the [2022] National Poetry Series. The book focuses on masculinity, Black male identity. And I love how the work is so gentle, but it has also kind of like a music rhythm to it. Just like how his work kind of expands with language and he will take a word and kind of build around it. And he is a coder, like a computer coder. I truly, really admire his work and his style.โ


โI think The Mayor of Maxwell Street is a really good one as well,โ Settles says. โ[The author] is from Memphis. I think her work is brilliant.โ Within The Mayor of Maxwell Street, the daughter of the โwealthiest Negro in America,โ Nelly Sawyer, finds herself the premier debutante of Black society after the sudden death of her only brother, and immediately, she is whisked off to a number of social engagements as part of her coming-out, much to her chagrin. She has her secrets, though โ for the past year, sheโs written as an undercover investigative journalist, reporting โthe achievements and tribulations of everyday Black people living in the shadow of Jim Crow.โ Nellyโs latest assignment: to identify the head of an underground crime syndicate, the so-called Mayor of Maxwell Street. Soon, she enlists the help of the mysterious low-level speakeasy manager, Jay Shorey.
Settles isnโt the only one recommending Cunninghamโs debut novel; so is Jeremee DeMoir of DeMoir Books & Things. For younger readers, though, he recommends Jason Reynoldsโ Stuntboy (Childrenโs) and Keith F. Miller Jr.โs Pritty (YA). And for a more classic read, DeMoir has been reading Giovanniโs Room by James Baldwin.

โHeโs just a classic author, with a really amazing touch,โ the online bookstore owner says. โHe breathes fresh life into a romantic mystery. Giovanniโs Room is a classic queer novel that follows two characters in Paris as theyโre going through discovering their identity within the queer community in Paris in the 1950s. So itโs a book definitely ahead of its time, but super refreshing and super current despite being written in the 20th century.โ

Lastly, Corey Mesler of Burkeโs Book Store gives his two cents on whatโs in this month: โClaire Keeganโs outsize bandwagon is worth jumping on. I donโt mind being the hundred-thousandth reader to marvel at her spare, shimmering prose, and recommend her to all and sundry. Her latest, So Late in the Day, a collection of three short stories (two appeared in previous books) is more evidence that she is one of our best writers, despite her limited output. Quality over quantity. My favorite is her novel, Small Things Like These (the title might be a statement of purpose). You can read it in one sitting but you will savor its reverberations long after setting it down.โ
All books mentioned can be purchased at the respective bookstore locations. Support indie and support local. For upcoming book events, including book clubs and author signings, visit the Flyerโs event calendar.

