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Black Issues
Book Review
Business address:
Empire State Building 350 Fifth Avenue,
Suite 1522
New York, NY 10118
Tel. 212-947-8515
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For readers of the black press, a new forum for black literature
By
Celia McGee
The New York Times
(November 11, 2006) Joy Bramble remembers when black writers struggled
to attain their dreams and the attention needed to sustain them.
“Now I can’t believe how many books are being published by black writers,”
she said. “It’s almost as if we’re recognizing suddenly that people want
to read them, and we have so many stories to tell.”
Getting the word out to potential readers, though, has not been easy.
Publishers and authors still worry that African-American titles receive
sparse coverage in the mainstream media — where the space allotted to
books has been dwindling — while historically black newspapers like The
Baltimore Times, where Ms. Bramble is publisher, often have scant
resources to cover the arts.
But next week The Baltimore Times will join The New York Amsterdam News,
The Philadelphia Tribune and several others in introducing Blacks & Books,
a monthly insert focusing on books by or of interest to readers of African
descent. The project was conceived by Ken Smikle, president of the
Chicago-based market research and media consulting company Target Market
News, which in March acquired the respected bimonthly magazine Black
Issues Book Review.
“We’re trying to bring an otherwise unheard black perspective about things
happening in book publishing across the board,” said Mr. Smikle, who is
publishing Blacks & Books from Black Issues’ small, book-stuffed suite of
offices on the 15th floor of the Empire State Building. “I have long
thought that black newspapers were underutilized in that area.”
The first cover story: Senator Barack Obama and his current best seller,
“The Audacity of Hope.”
Contributors will include Black Issues regulars, as well as freelancers,
established authors and newspaper journalists. In addition to reviews and
features, there will be a best-seller list, author interviews, a literary
calendar and a children’s and young-adult section.

The staff of Black Issues Book Review
and the new Blacks & Books. Photo by Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
Mr. Smikle has placed day-to-day supervision in the hands of Susan
McHenry, a founding editor of Black Issues who returned as editorial
director after Mr. Smikle’s acquisition. “The writers will be a
combination of familiar names and young people,” Ms. McHenry said,
“because it’s an opportunity to help another generation find a voice.”
The publishing industry is greeting the enterprise and its initial
100,000-copy print run with enthusiasm, and caution. Delivering a national
publication to a local, selected readership does make economic sense,
publishers said, especially with advertising rates topping out at $8,000
for a full-page color ad and the potential for additional presence in
retail outlets, at book festivals and among book clubs.
Still, said Sara Nelson, editor in chief of Publishers Weekly: “In this
day and age, with newspapers cutting back on book coverage, I think it’s a
brave move.” Even her publication, the book industry’s chief trade
journal, addresses the flourishing black market primarily “with several
features a year and during Black History Month,” she said, so she would
welcome someone compiling an African-American best-seller list.
With so little marketing money to spread around, and so much of it going
to a handful of high-profile titles, publishers depend on the attention of
book reviews. But mainstream reviews often suffer from “a complete absence
of African-American titles,” said Patrik Henry Bass, the books editor of
Essence magazine. “To read them, you’d think that in a month only one or
two are released.”
Sam Tanenhaus, editor of The New York Times Book Review, said, “Nothing is
sufficiently covered.”
“We get so many books, and space is so limited,” he said, “and we tend to
concentrate on serious fiction and nonfiction. So we’re more likely to do
a big takeout on Edward P. Jones, as we did, and we published Skip Gates’s
introduction to ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin,’ ” he said, referring to Henry Louis
Gates Jr. “Our books tend to be a small, select group, but that’s across
the board,” he added.
Instead, African-American authors have come to rely on radio, word of
mouth, church group appearances, book signings and the occasional “Oprah
effect.” The best-selling novelist Terry McMillan, who helped kick-start
the upsurge in black books, first introduced herself to a wider public by
“putting her books in the back of her car and driving to churches and
conventions and wherever else she could talk to black folks,” Mr. Smikle
said.
Blacks & Books, he suggested, is his declaration that writers shouldn’t
have to do that.
This is especially true now that the larger publishing world has taken
notice, adding new imprints and more African-American editors in recent
years. The flood of new titles range from literary to populist, chick lit
to street lit to spirit lit, Edward P. Jones to Tyler Perry to Tavis
Smiley’s surprise hit “The Covenant With Black America.” Seven-figure
deals are being made.
Nonetheless, the frustration remains. “Black authors don’t succeed because
of the system, but in spite of it,” Mr. Smikle said.
When fresh out of Queens College in the early 1970s, Mr. Smikle started
with his brother, the photographer Dawoud Bey, a black arts journal called
Easy. It was short-lived.
“I wanted to be the black Jann Wenner,” he said, laughing. His short Afro
is graying now, and his wardrobe runs to crisp white shirts and
conservative ties. Blacks & Books is a means of joining the system with a
twist.
For the first issue, the cover story by the Chicago journalist Sabrina
Miller fits that bill, Ms. McHenry said. Senator Obama’s book, following
on the success of his memoir “Dreams From My Father” (1995), explores this
Illinois Democrat’s political vision. And, unlike other books by political
figures, he actually wrote it, Ms. McHenry said.
“His memoir was one of my absolute favorites,” she said. “He’s like the
21st-century Frederick Douglass. He gives us an interesting way to launch.
As an icon in America and in our community, lots of different hopes are
pinned on him.”
Valerie Boyd, an assistant professor of journalism at the University of
Georgia and author of “Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston,”
believes Blacks & Books is an important step. “For me, as a black writer,”
she said, “it indicates that there’s at least a perception of black people
as active and engaged readers who are willing to read new books, which is
the opposite of the way the book industry seems to think of them.”
It also means that African-American newspapers can begin to regain the
role they once played in the literary marketplace, Mr. Bass said.
“It’s gratifying to know that the black press can once again have the
continuing presence of books,” he said.
Mr. Smikle knows he and his staff have their work cut out. He doesn’t have
as many ad pages in the first issue as he would like, and some newspaper
markets he has been courting are not yet on board.
“I have this theory, though,” he said. “When you get an idea, you launch
first, and the rest will come.”
No splashy party is planned, either, Ms. McHenry said. “We’ll have an
anniversary party, a celebration of its longevity instead,” she said.
Go to Black Issues Book Review homepage
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Copyright ©
2006 Black Issues Book Review
Empire State Building • 350 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1522
New York, NY • 10118-0165
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in its seventh year of publication, Black Issues Book Review is the
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