Buy books & audiobooks by Author/poet Meredith Coleman McGee

https://meredithetc.com/meredith-coleman-mcgee/ books by Meredith Coleman McGee

https://www.audible.com/author/Meredith-Coleman-McGee/B07233GDMX Audiobooks by Meredith Coleman McGee

Meredith C. McGee hosted the Virtual Holiday Book Festival Sat. Take a peak!

Meredith C. McGee, Event Organizer, Community Library Mississippi Goes Virtual, hosted the Virtual Holiday Book Festival Saturday. Take a peak!

Virtual Holiday Book Festival, marketplace, 1st 55 minutes, Sat. Nov. 28, 2020
Virtual Holiday Book Festival, Saturday, Nov. 28, 2020, full festival 7.57 hours

Thanks to the parents, participants, the audience, and everyone who had a hand in the Delta Book Festival 2020 Spelling Bee.

Announcing Delta Book Festival 11.28.2020 Spelling Bee winners:

1st Grade:

1st Place – Harrynoel Chia

2nd Place – Robert Lee Williams, III

3rd Grade

1st Place – Peyton Jones

2nd Place – D’zaria Butler

3rd Place – Ty’Leeann Hines

Combined 4th/5th/6th Grade:

1st Place – Shivaani Kumaravenkatesh (4th grade),

2nd Place – Daniel Knott (6th grade)

2nd Place – Charis Ngong (5th grade)

Jackson Book Festival hosted its 3rd Poetry Contest during the Virtual Holiday Book Festival. *Announcing 11.28.2020 Winners *

Elementary group:

1st Place Trophy Shivaani Thamizhmani

2nd Place Trophy Chelsea Smith

3rd place medallion tie: Harrynoel Chia and Clifton King.

Middle School:

1st Place Trophy Clarence Ngong

2nd Place Trophy Hannah King

H.S. Adult:

1st Place Trophy Marcus Lewis

2nd Place Trophy Mikayla Smith

3rd Place medallion goes to Malesha Smith

Several parents competed in the poetry competition with their child or children. They received trophies too.

Smith Family won Talented Family Team

Lakenderick & Zoe Davis’s family won Talented Family Team

Thamizhmani family won Talented Family Team

Nashida: Visits Mississippi’s Old Capitol Museum lands on shelf of Singing River Genealogy and Local History Library

Nashida : Visits Mississippi’s Old Capitol Museum / by Meredith Coleman McGee.

Author: McGee, Meredith C., author.

ISBN: 9781987089974

Personal Author: McGee, Meredith C., author.

Physical Description: iii,

75 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.

Series: Moses Meredith Cultural Arts Children’s Book Series ; Vol. 3

General Note: “A Meredith Etc Book”

Corporate Subject: Mississippi State Historical Museum — Juvenile literature.
Old Capitol (Jackson, Miss.) — Juvenile literature.

Subject Term: Jackson (Miss.) — History — Juvenile literature.

Geographic Term: Jackson (Miss.) — Buildings, structures, etc. — Juvenile literature.

Available:1

LibraryClick to SortMaterial TypeClick to SortCall NumberClick to SortStatusClick to Sort
Singing River Genealogy and Local History LibraryBookSRGLH J976.251 MCGEEChildren

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/nashida-meredith-coleman-mcgee/1132050769?ean=9781987089974

Thank you for shopping with Meredith Etc

Thank you for shopping with Meredith Etc. Enjoy My First Book Series and My Picture Dictionary which are educational resources for early learners. Proceeds support Community Library Mississippi, a nonprofit public charity chaired by Meredith Coleman McGee, Publisher, Meredith Etc.

My First Book Series by Meredith Coleman McGee, Danielle Bogan et al. 6 volumes, 208 pages.

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/my-picture-dictionary-meredith-coleman-mcgee/1132544787 My Picture Dictionary by Meredith Coleman McGee, Mary Haralson Coleman, et al.

Signing Day for Meredith Etc & Irma Rodgers Walker

I was happy and felt privileged to acquire another manuscript earlier today for publication. Irma Rodgers Walker, a South Jackson resident is a native of Sharkey County, Mississippi in the Delta. Walker imparts mother wit treasures in her upcoming work. Irma Rodgers Walker is the author of “It Starts with the Parents,” which was published in 2013. As the eighth of 15 children, Walker learned early in life that the common sense of mothers is valuable.

Signing Day with Meredith Etc, represented by Publisher/Acquisition Editor Meredith Coleman McGee and Author Irma Rodgers Walker

By Meredith Coleman McGee, http://www.meredithetc.com

Thank you for purchasing “Nashida: Visits Mississippi’s Old Capitol Museum”

Thank you for purchasing “Nashida: Visits Mississippi’s Old Capitol Museum” by Meredith Coleman McGee. Try Volume 1. “Nashida: Visits the Smith Robertson Museum” and Volume 2 “Nashida: Visits the Mississippi State Capitol”

Rest in Power Dorothy Mays Gibbs James, a Black Nubian Queen, Greenwood, MS Native

At this hour, I mourn the loss of a woman who has been a part of my village and a mainstay in my life since I was a child. Dorothy Mays attended Jackson State College with my father and my uncle. She and my mother have been friends forever. Ms. Dorothy drove from Memphis to Jackson to see me jump the broom on September 25, 1998. She drove to Georgia year before last to attend my sister Evalyn’s wedding.

On March 10th of this year, she helped my husband and I find masks to protect us from this virus that had just hit the news. She told a lady, “I got my family with me. Can you give me two masks for them. They are getting ready to get on a plane.” The lady went over to a box grabbed two masks and handed them right over. On the 25th of March she picked my husband and I up from the Memphis airport. By them we had learned that hugging people you love was forbidden.

The previous month, on February 9, 2020, Ms. Dorothy’s brother drove her to attend the Jackson Book Festival at the Jackson Medical Mall, an event I coordinated. Her early learning material was a big hit. She was selling her wares. She spent her entire career working with early learners and elementary children. I can remember her saying, “when children are that age (5 – 6) they need to be hands on writing, coloring, and drawing.”

Ms. Dorothy also told me that the word ‘alphabet’ is plural and it needs no (s). Come to think about it, I learned a lot from her. I became interesting in early learners and increasing literacy in my community in recent years. But, Ms. Dorothy was working with early learners before I could hold a pencil. When I was young, I was so proud to see Ms. Dorothy on Television. Dorothy Mays Gibbs was the first black female television personality in Jackson, MS. She was hired by WLBT Channel 3 in July of 1972 to host Our Playmates.

Our Playmates was a 30-minute program which came on five days a week. Ms. Dorothy created the games and activities for the show. She hosted different groups of black and white children which was groundbreaking. In fact, at that time, blacks consisted of a mere 10 percent of the stations employees. Ms. Dorothy was shining like new money in 1972. She was a black woman with intellect who was connecting to an integrated group of children just one year after the State of Mississippi started complying with the 1954 Brown decision.

She was creative. She was a trendsetting. She was a mover. She was a shaker. She was a fly role model.

I admired Ms. Dorothy. Right now as I think about all the decades I’ve known Ms. Dorothy and her daughters who were our playmates I am happy to hold so many memories in my heart.

But, most of all, I am grateful because Ms. Dorothy told me, “Now, Meredith you write a book on your uncle for an adult audience.” She and mama had collaborated to write a book on my uncle for early learners. Their collaboration became, “A Story About James H. Meredith: A Civil Rights Leader (52 pages). Then mama (Hazel Janell Meredith) wrote My Brother J-Boy a 100-page illustrated children’s book on James H. Meredith.

Mama worked in early childhood in the 1960s and 70s too. She was a nutritionist. Ms. Dorothy set out to fill a gap because she felt it was important for children in the Memphis, TN school system to have access to books on James H. Meredith who broke down Jim Crow barriers on the college level. He also spurred black voter registration in the south. Mama asked me to write a summary on my uncle. After I wrote the summary, Ms. Dorothy say something that had never crossed my mind.

She said, “Meredith looks like you know quite a bit about J-Boy you write a book for an adult audience.” Her comment was not a suggestion it was a command so I replied, “Okay.”

Believe or not, from that day forward I became a student on the subject of James H. Meredith. As I conducted research my uncle became an historic figure rather than my uncle. I interviewed him, his siblings, his peers and the rest is history. After receiving 16 rejection letters, I found a commercial publisher. After the committee voted to publish my manuscript, Amazon was changing the game and Greenville Publishing merged with Praeger Publishing and ABC-CLIO which produced textbooks. I was asked to convert my manuscript from APA Style to Chicago Manual of Style.

My second book James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him and the first book I wrote alone was placed in the textbook market and because my subject was famous my book landed in the national and international textbook market.

I owe that milestone to the lady who assisted that I write a book about her former college friend who happened to be my famous uncle. I owe a lot of gratitude to Ms. Dorothy which stems from much more than a book.

Writing this blog took the sadness away and replaced it with hope and positive reflections. To creativity! To the future. To women pushing women up. To us pushing each other up. To ending systemic racism. To economics for me and for you!

To a better world. Rest in Power Ms. Dorothy. Love you.

Dorothy Mays James and Hazel Janell Meredith (Hall) bidding farewell to Virgie Banks

The Mississippi Sovereignty Commission spied on Albert and Dorothy Gibbs. In the late 60s and early 70s the couple used their voices for our generation.

Happy reading my friend

Happy reading my friend. Thank you for purchasing print copies of “James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him” and “Social Justice and Christianity.”

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1793405255

Review of “James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him and his generation.”

Aaron Timoteo

Hello, Ms. McGee! I recently received a copy of your biography of your uncle, and I just want to thank you for all the research and passion you poured into that project. I’m a first cousin twice removed from Mr. Meredith (a fellow descendant of William & Roxie Patterson through Esau Patterson’s line), and I have been amazed at all the family history you’ve collected. The stories that were passed down are inspiring, tragic, and hope-giving all at once, and I’m so grateful that you’ve captured them. (And that’s just after reading the first chapter!) So I just wanted to express my deep appreciation for your work, and I pray God blesses whatever you do next.

Slightly smiling face
🙏🏾

Best hopes from one distant cousin to another, Aaron T. Sheppard

Relative of the author and James Meredith leaves review after learning new information about the family.

New Audio book “Nashida: Visits the Mississippi State Capitol”by Meredith Coleman McGee

https://www.acx.com/titleview/A3B4HFS0TRAWCE

on sale https://www.amazon.com/dp/1974651045 sale price $5.98