Shelby County High School is quiet. It’s summer. Kids are on break. Classrooms are empty, halls are vacant, the school office is a tomb.
Today, the library is the only room with lights on. Inside are people wearing nice clothes.
There are tables with finger food. Chicken salad is the star of this show. There are sugary items galore. Sweet tea. Lemonade.
The occasion: Mister Latham’s retirement party.
Behind the library desk sits the man himself. A bearded fella in a straw hat. He’s got a happy face, and a personality that could light up a Friday-night home game.
“Mister Latham’s been in this school system thirty-two years,” says one woman. “Been here since before some teachers were even born.”
Ask anyone. Mister Latham is the face of this county. Almost everyone in the region knows him.
His job description isn’t even worth mentioning—because this was more than just a job. It was his home. His church. His family. His world.
Nobody here can articulate how much he means. But they
try.
“Describing how we’re gonna miss Mister Latham,” says one man, “is like describing how much you’d miss water or air.”
He’s taught it all: English, academic research, he’s been a shoulder for crying into, a sounding board.
And he writes. Mister Latham is, and always has been, a writer’s writer. He's written since his early days. Not long ago, he started a blog. It began as a way to share meaningful stories.
The blog took off like a souped-up Pontiac, and his words have become the voice of his own people.
One woman tells me, “I always knew he was talented, but he's always just been so humble.”
Humbleness. Another of his afflictions.
Today, his friends…