Genre: Historical
Guest
post: Why did you write your book?
Working as a journalist for 30-plus years, I made little
money--but I gained something more valuable: a conviction that I was making a
difference in my community and in the wider world.
During my decades as a newspaper reporter and then as a
correspondent for a national news agency, I discovered the power of the written
word to tear down, uplift, and transform.
So it makes perfect sense that, when I turned to fiction, I
would write books about women who made their mark on the world.
From the Prophet Muhammad’s favorite wife to four sisters
who became European queens in the 13th century, my protagonists are
movers and shakers. Josephine Baker may be the most important of them all
because of all she did for her “people”--the African-American community.
Born in 1906 and raised in the St. Louis slums, she knew
racism first-hand, abused by the white woman in whose home she worked at age 7;
traumatized by the East St. Louis Race Riots in 1917, when white workers and their
families set fire to black families’ homes and shot and lynched those who tried
to escape; confronted by men in white hoods and “whites only” signs in the
American South as a girl of 13 touring on the black vaudeville circuit, and
much more.
In Paris at age 19, she discovered a different world, one in
which black people and white ate together, sat in theaters and on streetcars
and buses together, danced onstage together, and even married one another. She
must have thought she’d died and gone to heaven.
But hatred wasn’t so easy to escape. It followed her: to
Paris, where white Americans confronted her and even had her removed from the
hotel where she was lodging; to Germany, where Hitler’s Brownshirts threatened
her; and all around the world, as she performed her famous “banana dance” in
spite of protesters’ calling her a “black demon”—and worse.
By the time the Nazis invaded Paris in 1940, Josephine Baker
was already working as a spy for the nascent Resistance movement, seducing
generals and diplomats to confide in her, then carrying the information across
borders.
Empowered by these experiences, she embarked on her third
U.S. tour in 1951 with another goal in mind: to put an end to racial
segregation. She publicly declared that she would perform in no nightclubs or
theaters and patronize no businesses that segregated their clientele.
As a result, many venues allowed black people through their
doors for the first time—and Ms. Baker became the target of an FBI
investigation into her alleged ties with the Communist Party. Her outspokenness
resulted in many canceled gigs and the loss of a movie deal, and ultimately the
loss of her castle in southern France.
She never gave up or expressed any regrets about her
activism, though. Indeed, she persisted. In 1963, she was invited to
Washington, D.C., to speak at the March on Washington with Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr.—the only woman to speak.
I wrote JOSEPHINE BAKER’S LAST DANCE to remind the world
that the woman in the banana skirt was so much more than that. Josephine Baker
was a force of nature and a force for change, and gave everything she had in
effort to make a difference for African-Americans.
By telling her story as well as the stories of all my
fictional heroines, I hope to make a difference, too. This is why I exist, and
why I write.
Write Now Literaryis pleased to be organizing a book tour for Josephine Baker’s Last Dance by Sherry Jones. The tour will run February 25-March 1, 2019. Book your own tour here.
Read the first chapter
ISBN-10: 1501102443
ISBN-13: 978-1501102448
Genre: Historical
About Sherry Jones
Author and journalist Sherry Jones is best known for her international bestseller The Jewel of Medina. She is also the author of The Sword of Medina, Four Sisters, All Queens, The Sharp Hook of Love, and the novella White Heart. Sherry lives in Spokane, WA, where, like Josephine Baker, she enjoys dancing, singing, eating, advocating for equality, and drinking champagne.
About the Book
From the author of The Jewel of Medina, a moving and insightful novel based on the life of legendary performer and activist Josephine Baker, perfect for fans of The Paris Wife and Hidden Figures.
Discover the fascinating and singular life story of Josephine Baker—actress, singer, dancer, Civil Rights activist, member of the French Resistance during WWII, and a woman dedicated to erasing prejudice and creating a more equitable world—in Josephine Baker’s Last Dance.
In this illuminating biographical novel, Sherry Jones brings to life Josephine's early years in servitude and poverty in America, her rise to fame as a showgirl in her famous banana skirt, her activism against discrimination, and her many loves and losses. From 1920s Paris to 1960s Washington, to her final, triumphant performance, one of the most extraordinary lives of the twentieth century comes to stunning life on the page.
With intimate prose and comprehensive research, Sherry Jones brings this remarkable and compelling public figure into focus for the first time in a joyous celebration of a life lived in technicolor, a powerful woman who continues to inspire today.
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