Merit, Not Sympathy, Wins
The Life and Times of Blind Boone
Mary Collins Barile
ISBN: | 9781612480657 |
Publisher: | Truman State University Press |
Published: | 1 June, 2012 |
Format: | Paperback |
Language: | English |
Links | Australian Libraries (Trove) |
Editions: |
50 other editions
of this product
|
- 1 Cop Hater
- 2 The Mugger
- 4 The Con Man
- 5 Killer's Choice
- 6 Killer's Payoff
- 7 Lady killer
- 8 Killer's Wedge
- 9 'Til Death
- 11 Give the Boys a Great Big Hand
- 12 Heckler
- 14 Lady, Lady I Did It
- 15 The Empty Hours
- 16 Like Love
- 17 Ten plus one
- 18 Ax
- 19 He Who Hesitates
- 20 Doll
- 22 Fuzz
- 24 Jigsaw
- 25 Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here!
- 26 Let's Hear It for the Deaf Man
- 27 Sadie When She Died
- 28 Hail to the chief
- 29 Bread
- 31 So Long as You Both Shall Live
- 32 Long Time No See
- 33 Calypso
- 34 Ghosts
- 35 Heat
- 36 Ice
- 37 Lightning
- 38 Eight Black Horses
- 39 Poison
- 40 Tricks
- 41 Lullaby
- 42 Vespers
- 43 widows
- 45 Mischief and Widows
- 46 Romance
- 47 Nocturne
- 48 The Big Bad City
- 50 Money, Money, Money
- 52 Frumious Bandersnatch
- 53 Hark!
- 54 Fiddlers
- And All through the House
- Blood Relatives
- Bread;
- Calypso
- Eighty Million Eyes
- Fat Ollie's Book
- Fat Ollie's Book
- Fat Ollie's Book: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- Heat
- Killer's Payoff
- King's Ransom
- Kiss
- Kiss: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- Lullaby
- Mischief / Widows
- Nocturne
- Poison
- Romance
- See them die
- Shotgun
- Shotgun
- The Empty Hours
- The Frumious Bandersnatch
- The Heckler
- The Last Dance: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- The Pusher
- The SE BIG BAD CITY
- Tricks
Merit, Not Sympathy, Wins
The Life and Times of Blind Boone
Mary Collins Barile
In post-Reconstruction America, John William "Blind" Boone, an illiterate, itinerant musician, overcame obstacles created by disability, exploitative managers, and racial prejudice to become one of the country's most beloved concert performers. Melissa Fuell-Cuther's out-of-print biography, Blind Boone: His Life and Achievements, relates the highlights of Boone's harrowing journey and also testifies to the struggles of many African Americans during the Jim Crow era. With the initial publication of the Boone biography in 1915, Fuell-Cuther broke ground as the first American black author to write about the life of a black musician. As a member of Boone's concert company, she provided firsthand knowledge of Boone's early years, his career performing tours across the country, and perhaps most importantly, his professional and personal relationship with John Lange, whom many at the time considered the best entertainment manager, black or white, in the country. The story of Blind Boone is revitalized in this annotated edition of the biography, accompanied by essays describing the Missouri environment in which the artist lived, his place within the landscape of American music, and his achievements after publication of the second edition of Fuell's biography. Early black performers faced barriers of discrimination with perseverance, resilience, and courage to carve a path for future generations.
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