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ELLA by Diane Richards

ELLA

by Diane Richards

Pub Date: May 7th, 2024
ISBN: 9780063338654
Publisher: Amistad/HarperCollins

Stardom did not come easily for Ella Fitzgerald.

Richards delivers a straightforward yet heartbreaking fictional account of the difficult years Fitzgerald endured prior to her discovery, and ultimate success, as one of the most popular and recognizable voices of the 20th century. She spent her early years in Yonkers, New York, intent upon perfecting—and becoming known for—her dance skills. When the Great Depression puts her family in a precarious financial situation, 15-year-old Ella rebels against the limits placed on her freedom to pursue her choreographic dreams, but the death of her mother kickstarts a series of awful events that test her determination and perseverance. After escaping the abusive and sexually predatory behavior of her stepfather, Ella seeks refuge with an aunt who lives in Harlem. Her journey through the next years is marked by poverty and frustration as well as casual and brutally intentional racism…and a growing self-realization that song is the force that sustains her through life’s hardest times. Jobs in Harlem’s bustling underground economy provide Ella with money, street smarts, and shelter, but truancy and implication as a witness in a mob killing provide her with a trip to a New York State reform “school” for girls. Richards’ chronicle of the torture and abuse meted out to the institution’s residents—to young Black women in particular—is revelatory and places Ella’s eventual triumphs in a larger context. Richards, herself a former backup singer for Whitney Houston, provides an extensive list of resources she consulted in piecing together Fitzgerald’s early life. Scenes ranging from street-corner dancing, ballroom routines, numbers running, and life in a Depression-era Hooverville make it easy to envision a movie treatment for this deep dive into the forces shaping an extraordinary talent.

A remarkable life in song honored in prose.