Written by: Carole Boston Weatherford
Illustrated by: Elizabeth Zunon
For ages: Elementary students and older
Language: English
Topics Covered: POC-Centric Narratives, Racism, Jim Crow, Segregation, Entertainment Industry, Historical Figures, Civil Rights, Modern Black Freedom Struggle.
Summary: This book spans the life of Lena Horne, legendary vocalist and performer. Lena was born to parents that constantly hustled and were nomadic at times. At age 2, she became the youngest member of the NAACP! Lena got used to traveling with her mother doing vaudeville shows and sometimes staying with her grandmother where Lena took music and dance classes. Her grandmother forbade her to consider a career in show business despite Lena’s interest in the entertainment industry. Lena attended school until the Great Depression hit, when she became a chorus line dancer at The Cotton Club in Harlem and was coached by her mother. Soon, she became a Broadway performer and cut a record at age 18. Lena began to travel but experienced segregationist racism in many places, and her manager began to introduce her as Cuban instead of Black. Eventually, MGM offered Lena a movie contract-the first one to be offered to an African-American actress! Despite this, she had trouble securing movie roles due to her activism and white women wearing makeup in movies to look Black. Lena sang at Truman’s inaugural ball, had two children, and was divorced. She married a white music director partially to help her career, and it worked (but she learned to love him!). She took time off from performing and became a foot soldier for the activist efforts to end segregation and worked with the NAACP, National Council for Negro Women, and spoke at the March on Washington. Lena eventually returned to the big screen, and continued to perform for years to come.
This book is very thorough, being clear about the hardships that Lena endured throughout her life and highlighting her activism. It mentioned other individuals doing the same work she was doing, in some places by name and in some places not. The author highlights how hard Lena works without reducing her to exceptionalism. This is a long book made for older elementary students and covers a wide range and variety of topics, including fantastic vocabulary associated with the Modern Black Freedom Struggle. An Author’s Note is in the back along with sources and resources for further learning!
About the Author & the Illustrator:
Carole Boston Weatherford is Baltimore-born and -raised! Carole composed her first poem in first grade and dictated the verse to her mother on the ride home from school. Her father, a high school printing teacher, printed some of her early poems on index cards. Since her literary debut with Juneteenth Jamboree in 1995, Carole’s books have received three Caldecott Honors, two NAACP Image Awards, an SCBWI Golden Kite Award, a Coretta Scott King Author Honor and many other honors.
For career achievements, Carole received the Ragan-Rubin Award from North Carolina English Teachers Association and the North Carolina Literature Award, among the state’s highest civilian honors. She holds an M.A. in publications design from University of Baltimore and an M.F.A. in creative writing from University of North Carolina, Greensboro. She is a Professor of English at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina.
Elizabeth Zunon was born in Albany, NY and spent her childhood in a hot, sunny, tropical country in West Africa called the Ivory Coast (Cote d’Ivoire), where people speak French (and many other languages). Elizabeth’s Mom read Elizabeth’s little brother and Elizabeth a lot of bedtime stories in English after they came home from speaking French all day at school. As a little girl, she loved to draw, paint, make up dances and play dress-up, and as Elizabeth grew up, that didn’t really change! After returning to the United States, Elizabeth attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) and graduated in June 2006 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration. She’s now back in Albany, where every day she might draw, paint, collage, sew, silkscreen, make jewelry, purses, and ponder the endless possibilities of chocolate! Her work is largely influenced by the people, places, and things from her childhood in the Ivory Coast as the product of two cultures. You can also follow her blog-Lizzie Blogs!