Celebrate the Book!

Powerhouse - Doors: 5:30 pm - Refreshments - Show: 6 pm - Book signing: 7 pm - FREE Admission!

Powerhouse Arts Center in Oxford, MS March 26, 2026 at 6 pm

Live show! TV Taping! Thursday, March 26, 2026 – 6 pm – Powerhouse Arts Center, 413 S. 14th Street, Oxford, MS

FREE Admission! Public invited! Come early – stay late for book signing!

Celebrating the Oxford Conference For The Book! (No conference registration required). Public invited!

Doors: 5:30 pm – Frosty Refreshments

**NOTE: This show will be filmed by Mississippi Public Broadcasting Television for telecast later this year.**

Show: 6 pm

Book signing: 7 pm (Conference authors)

Guests for the show:

Author: Tom Junod – In The Days of My Youth I Was Told What It Means To Be A Man – Two-time National Magazine Award winner, “intensely emotional detective story.”

Author: AJ WhiteWillie Morris Award for Poetry – Awarded annually in fiction, non-fiction and poetry

Music:  – Jemero Carter/KingdomologyThe Glory Encounter – Soul/gospel

Music: Otha Turner Boys – Fife and drum tribute to a North Mississippi tradition

Hosts: Jim Dees with Paul Tate and the Yalobushwhackers

Airtimes:

Thursday, March 26 – 6 pm (CT) WUMS 92.1 University of Mississippi

Wednesday, April 1 – 10 pm (ET) WUTC 88.1 FM Chattanooga, TN

Thursday, April 2– 8 am (CT) WYXR 91.7 FM Memphis, TN.

Saturday, April 4

5 pm (CT) Mississippi Public Broadcasting

9 pm (CT) Alabama Public Radio

Sunday, April 5

3 pm (ET) WUOT | 91.9 FM, Knoxville

2 pm (MT) KNCE 93.5 | Taos, New Mexico

6 pm (CT) Mississippi Public Broadcasting

Archived here: Thacker Mountain Radio Hour – WYXR | 91.7 FM | MEMPHIS

Featuring

Author

Tom Junod

Tom Junod is author of the memoir, In the Days of My Youth I Was Told What It Means to Be a Man (Doubleday), an intensely emotional “detective” story powered by a series of cascading family revelations.

Junod traces his charismatic, philandering father who tried to mold his son in his image, the many secrets he hid and Junod’s discovery of truths about his family, himself and, ultimately, what it means to be a man.

Tom Junod is senior writer for ESPN, where his work has won an Emmy and the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting.

He is a two-time National Magazine Award winner, and has been honored with a James Beard Award for essay writing. Previously he was a staff writer at GQ and Esquire.

The film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood was based on his article in Esquire.

He lives in Atlanta with his wife and daughter.

AJ White

AJ White is a poet and educator from Georgia.

His debut poetry collection, Blue Loop, is from University of Georgia Press. White won a prestigious National Poetry Series competition, one of five national winners, that led to the book’s publication.

AJ has also won the Fugue Poetry Prize and received support from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference.

White’s poems express his kinship with the natural world.

A recent article in the Binghamton University News (where he is pursuing his Ph.D.) reveals his writing process starts with a walk, his thinking is improved when he lives near rivers and, in fact, “many of his works are themed around place and nature and, more specifically, rivers and clouds.”

His poems have been published in The Account, Best New Poets, Blackbird, Overheard, West Trade Review, and elsewhere.

AJ lives and teaches creative writing in New York.

NOTE: AJ will join his fellow Willie Morris Award winners, Susan Gregg Gilmore (fiction) and Kevin Sack (non-fiction) on Friday, March 27 at the Oxford Conference for the Book, organized by the UM Center for the Study of Southern Culture.

The session, at 4 p.m. at Off Square Books, will be followed by a book signing and closing reception for the conference.

Music

Jemero Carter & Kingdomology

Jemero Carter & Kingdomoloy is a contemporary gospel group from Memphis, TN that blends the sounds of traditional, trap, and contemporary gospel to reach across generational barriers.

The group’s mission is to “release the attributes of the Kingdom through our music and worship.”

Their latest album is The Glory Encounter.

The Otha Turner Boys

The Otha Turner Boys are a North Mississippi collective who carry on the centuries-old fife and drum music tradition.

The genre was popularized by the late Otha Turner (1908–2003) of Tate County, MS, who appeared in films by Martin Scorsese and received a National Heritage Fellowship.

Historians say the musical style emerged after the Civil War, with its mix of military fife and drums and African rhythms.