Julia Blackburn's brilliant and haunting new book is a life of Billie Holiday told in the voices of those who knew her. During the 1970s a young woman called Linda Kuehl, planning to write a biography of Billie, recorded interviews with more than 150 people. Kuehl died in 1978 and her book never came out, but her recordings survived to provide the raw material for this extraordinary account of the life of America's First Lady Jazz. Billie Holiday is usually portrayed as a tragic victim of her own vices. The intimate stories give us a much deeper picture of her personality -we witness scenes from her chaotic childhood; we see her when she first arrives in Harlem; and we hollow her through her rise to fame and into the notoriety that came so close on its heels. Billies' friends and lovers and fellow musicians talk about her troubles and her addictions, but they also have a lot to say about her warmth and her courage, and the ones who were really close to understood all that really mattered was the singing.
Julia Blackburn's brilliant and haunting new book is a life of Billie Holiday told in the voices of those who knew her. During the 1970s a young woman called Linda Kuehl, planning to write a biography of Billie, recorded interviews with more than 150 people. Kuehl died in 1978 and her book never came out, but her recordings survived to provide the raw material for this extraordinary account of the life of America's First Lady Jazz. Billie Holiday is usually portrayed as a tragic victim of her own vices. The intimate stories give us a much deeper picture of her personality -we witness scenes from her chaotic childhood; we see her when she first arrives in Harlem; and we hollow her through her rise to fame and into the notoriety that came so close on its heels. Billies' friends and lovers and fellow musicians talk about her troubles and her addictions, but they also have a lot to say about her warmth and her courage, and the ones who were really close to understood all that really mattered was the singing.