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Posted

Forthcoming from the University Press of Mississippi.

9781496861955_cover1_rb_fullcover.jpg

Whistle Stop traces the remarkable life of trumpeter and composer Kenny Dorham (1924–1972), whose journey from rural Texas to the forefront of modern jazz mirrors the broader story of Black resilience and creativity in twentieth-century America. Dorham was born in Freestone County to a sharecropping family whose roots stretch back to Reconstruction, when his great-grandfather owned and farmed land in East Texas. Raised there and in segregated East Austin, Dorham found his voice on the trumpet at Anderson High School, and after brief stops at Wiley College and in the army, he landed in New York just as bebop was transforming American music.

Dorham quickly became a cornerstone of that transformation. From performing with Charlie Parker, Art Blakey, and Max Roach to mentoring younger talents like Joe Henderson, he played a defining role in shaping modern jazz. A gifted composer, collaborator, and teacher, Dorham also helped lay the foundation for formal jazz education. Yet despite his immense contributions and the respect given him by other musicians, he remained underrecognized by critics—even as he continued to influence the musical generations that followed him.

Drawing on interviews, archival research, and family history, Whistle Stop offers a vivid portrait not only of a jazz innovator, but of a Texas family whose story stretches across emancipation, migration, segregation, and cultural transformation. More than fifty years after his passing, Kenny Dorham’s music and legacy continue to inspire—his whistle stop in jazz history still echoing.

https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/W/Whistle-Stop

Posted (edited)

This price difference betwen hardback and paperback versions seems to be an increasing trend these days, at least in the "special interest" non-fiction sector. 
Is there ANYTHING to warrant such differences with the hardback version? Particularly since it is not likely this can be recouped anywhere once these books hit the secondhand market. And production costs cannot really be THAT different.

Edited by Big Beat Steve
Posted

The hardback version is most likely to be purchased by libraries, which helps explain the pricing. Also, this is just how many academic presses operate.

Looks like this will also be available as an ebook.

Finally, you can also preorder via Bookshop (in case you don't want to give your $ to Amazon). 

https://bookshop.org/p/books/whistle-stop-kenny-dorham-jazz-and-the-journey-of-a-texas-family/548472d7f36a72cf?ean=9781496861955&next=t

Posted
1 hour ago, Joe said:

The hardback version is most likely to be purchased by libraries, which helps explain the pricing. Also, this is just how many academic presses operate.

Looks like this will also be available as an ebook.

Finally, you can also preorder via Bookshop (in case you don't want to give your $ to Amazon). 

https://bookshop.org/p/books/whistle-stop-kenny-dorham-jazz-and-the-journey-of-a-texas-family/548472d7f36a72cf?ean=9781496861955&next=t

A couple of years ago I asked my (semi-)local bookshop to order a jazz book (Sun Ra, I forget the title) for me. They told me they couldn't do it because it was published by a university press (although they sometimes stock university press releases 🤔). The shop is generally accommodating on special orders.

Either the shop let me down or there's something strange about university press operations.

Posted
4 hours ago, clifford_thornton said:

Might be a distribution issue with your local shop, wherein the cost to purchase is prohibitive or the distro only deals with shops that have a large minimum order baseline.

Yep, almost certainly a distribution issue. In my experience, few readers in the US understand just how outsized a role the distributors play in regulating ("throttling" may be the more appropriate term) their access to titles from small and independent presses (including university presses).

Best to buy direct or use a vendor like Bookshop or Asterism.

In any event - yeah, can't wait to read this one!

Posted

Thanks, I'll try to buy direct if paperback available. I try to avoid Amazon if economically feasible.

University Press distribution is weird. I see occasional U. Press titles on the shelves at that same shop, but apparently small special orders are too expensive.

Then again, the last U P title I remember actually buying there was Krin Gabbard's book on Mingus, which would have been 8 or 9 years ago, so the situation may have changed.

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