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Bessie Smith

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As a young black girl growing up in Glasgow, Jackie Kay found in Bessie Smith someone with whom she could identify and idolize. Her fascinating and extraordinary Outline mixes fact and fiction, poetry and prose as she relates the tempestuous life of the greatest blues singer who ever lived. She takes us from Bessie's early years of poverty in Chattanooga, and her time spent with Ma and Pa Rainey in the Moses Stokes Travelling Show, through her rapid rise to fame and fortune, her disasterous marriage to Jack Gee, her many lesbian affairs, her raucous and wild lifestyle on the road in her famous yellow Pullman railroad car, to her slide from popularity during the depression years and her eventual tragic death in a car crash in Clarksdale, Mississippi, in 1937.

160 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 1997

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About the author

Jackie Kay

106 books435 followers
Born in Glasgow in 1961 to a Scottish mother and a Nigerian father, Kay was adopted by a white couple, Helen and John Kay, as a baby. Brought up in Bishopbriggs, a Glasgow suburb, she has an older adopted brother, Maxwell as well as siblings by her adoptive parents.

Kay's adoptive father worked full-time for the Communist Party and stood for election as a Member of Parliament, and her adoptive mother was the secretary of the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND).

Initially harbouring ambitions to be an actress, she decided to concentrate on writing after encouragement by Alasdair Gray. She studied English at the University of Stirling and her first book of poetry, the partially autobiographical The Adoption Papers, was published in 1991, and won the Saltire Society Scottish First Book Award. Her other awards include the 1994 Somerset Maugham Award for Other Lovers, and the Guardian Fiction Prize for Trumpet, based on the life of American jazz musician Billy Tipton, born Dorothy Tipton, who lived as a man for the last fifty years of her life.

Kay writes extensively stage, screen, and for children. In 2010 she published Red Dust Road, an account of her search for her birth parents, a white Scottish woman, and a Nigerian man. Her birth parents met when her father was a student at Aberdeen University and her mother was a nurse. Her drama The Lamplighter is an exploration of the Atlantic slave trade. It was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in March 2007 and published in poem form in 2008.

Jackie Kay became a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) on 17 June 2006. She is currently Professor of Creative Writing at Newcastle University. Kay lives in Manchester.



Jackie Kay was born and brought up in Scotland. THE ADOPTION PAPERS (Bloodaxe, 1991) won the Forward Prize, a Saltire prize and a Scottish Arts Council Prize. DARLING was a poetry book society choice. FIERE, her most recent collection of poems was shortlisted for the COSTA award. Her novel TRUMPET won the Guardian Fiction Award and was shortlisted for the IMPAC award. RED DUST ROAD, (Picador) won the Scottish Book of the Year Award, was shortlisted for the JR ACKERLEY prize and the LONDON BOOK AWARD. She was awarded an MBE in 2006, and made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2002. Her book of stories WISH I WAS HERE won the Decibel British Book Award.
She also writes for children and her book RED CHERRY RED (Bloomsbury) won the CLYPE award. She has written extensively for stage and television. Her play MANCHESTER LINES produced by Manchester Library Theatre was on this year in Manchester. Her new book of short stories REALITY, REALITY was recently published by Picador. She is Professor of Creative Writing at Newcastle University.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews
Profile Image for Alwynne.
941 reviews1,608 followers
February 20, 2021
Poet Jackie Kay’s telling of the life of legendary singer Bessie Smith, “Empress of the Blues” who performed to packed-out venues across America in the 1920s. Kay mingles fact with imagined scenes and personal recollections tracing her own obsession with Smith’s work, dating back to being given one of her recordings as an adopted child in an almost totally white Glasgow; somehow listening to Smith’s voice and lyrics was a catalyst for Kay’s understanding and exploration of her own identity as black and lesbian. Kay doesn’t adopt a standard linear approach to Smith’s story here, instead she highlights aspects of Smith’s life and career: from her discovery, her disastrous marriage to abusive, manipulative Jack Gee, her numerous on the road affairs with women, to her recording contracts, unanticipated fame and flamboyant showmanship. Kay uses Smith’s experiences to consider what it was like to be both a celebrity and a black working-class woman in early 20th-century America, the lavish spending, the riotous ‘rent’ parties with flowing bootleg liquor and pigs’ foot stew, the ‘buffet flats’ that catered for every sexual whim, confrontations with the Klan, the relentless racism encountered on tour, the impact of colourism, and finally the almost-inevitable fall from grace.

I love Bessie Smith’s voice but apart from Queen Latifah’s recent biopic, I know almost nothing about her and I thought Kay did a reasonable job of sketching out key facts but I found the juxtaposition of memoir and biography and the disjointed structure often less than satisfying, Kay’s enthusiasm for Smith shines through at various points, and the portrait of Smith’s larger-than-life personality is decent enough, but there are quite a few sections that stray into rather flat, laundry-list territory. The passages linking Smith's personal history to wider issues around race and representation were probably the most engaging ones and it’s a shame that these weren’t more sustained. So, although I think this is an okay piece for any Smith fans, I’m not sure it’s the best place to start for readers who aren’t already interested in her and her music.
4 reviews14 followers
August 7, 2015
Read this as part of a historical research project... It's not bad, but I would not call it a good book. Te structure is ambitious but not well executed, it's at times difficult to tell the difference between an extended citation and a fictional addition of the author. I did however enjoy the honest dedication to pressing Bessie Smith's queerness, and there are many interesting anecdotes in the book as well as good poetry. The most disappointing thing is the writing quality. It feels like it was written for children and much of the historical context feels oversimplified (potentially because the author is from Scotland and the audience may be one unfamiliar with US history). The book is too sentimental and personal to be written badly.
Profile Image for David Ward.
Author 2 books18 followers
March 5, 2021
This is an extraordinary book about an extraordinary character.

Bessie Smith comes over as larger than life, a legend in life and death. I listened to some of her many recordings while I read, and hers was a voice that still sounds great despite early recording techniques. She is one woman in the same line as Billie Holiday, Janis Joplin and Amy Winehouse - all great, all tragic figures. Bessie is probably the most outrageous of them all.

Author Jackie Kay presents a personal view of Bessie that has been present most of Jackie's life, being lucky enough to be introduced to the blues and jazz at an early age.

This is well worth reading. It becomes clear that, as Bessie's gravestone proclaims, "The Greatest Blues Singer In The World Will Never Stop Singing."
24 reviews
October 28, 2021
Interesting and passionate account of the life, times and tribulations of this amazing talent.
Made me want to listen to her.
Profile Image for Tina.
686 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2022
This isn’t a straightforward biography. The author intertwines experiences and thoughts of her own. I loved it.
Profile Image for Ayre.
1,106 reviews42 followers
September 13, 2021
I got this book in a book box and I think placing it in that book box was a disservice to the author due to the fact that this book is a very niche subject. I'm entirely sure it has its audience but I don't think the readers of a queer book box for teens IS that audience. My rating of this book is based on my own enjoyment of it. If you are specifically seeking out information about Bessie Smith you're already much more likely to enjoy this book.

Lets get into what I felt about this book. The author is very obviously obsessed with Bessie Smith and that bias of fandom bleeds through often. This makes what should be a unbiased biography into more of fan fiction. Often times the author makes up fictional stories of what she thought Bessie or someone who interacted with Bessie would do in a situation where there is little information on whatever is being referenced (ie what Bessie was thinking as she died). Its honestly incredibly creepy if you don't take into account that the author isn't typically a non-fiction writer. I don't think there is a whole lot of actual information on Bessie's life so this felt very repetitive in order to flesh out the book. The author is also very much a fan of lists which not only annoys me but make the book feel like its being written for someone just learning to read (please note content in this book is not for children). There are also a lot of contradictions that I just didn't understand. For example, at one point the author is talking about Bessie fighting a lot and says she always uses her fists and never her words but then jumps into a story of Bessie yelling at people with no physical altercation involved. The author also references how Bessie's story is in her music often. How Bessie's music is her true autobiography... but Bessie barely wrote any of the songs she sang.

The final problem I had was what felt like a lot of unnecessary micro-aggressions. Bessie COULD NOT be described in this book without calling her fat in some why. Her weight was mentioned more than any other physical descriptor and there were whole sections on the racism she experienced. The other thing that bothered me was the shame involved around her sapphic sexual encounters. Her queerness was almost exclusively linked to her alcoholism. I couldn't tell if Bessie herself or the author was ashamed of Bessie's love of women.

As far as recommending this book, I obviously wouldn't. If you want a true biography this isn't it. Maybe try Bessie by Chris Albertson (Its the most frequently referenced book but I haven't read it so I don't know if its actually good). This book is strictly for people looking for somewhat accurate fan fiction presented as actual fact.

Profile Image for J.D. Frailey.
593 reviews10 followers
December 30, 2021
The first half of the book was brilliant, mesmerizing, as good as it gets. The author Jackie Kay has been the national poet of Scotland, a novelist and essayist as well as a poet. She and her brother are black, adopted by Scottish communist parents, her adoptive father was also a big blues fan who gave the author her first blues album when she was 12 years old, a Bessie Smith double album, and it changed her life. She said there are virtually no other Black people where they lived in Scotland, and this opened up a whole New World for her. The first half of the book also Chronicles the birth of the blues and especially blues women, who seemed to be all pretty highly sext, it didn’t matter if it was men or women, it was one big drunken party all the time. Bessie Smith had plenty of hard knocks in her life, singing on street corners for nickels when she was a small child, was picked up by Ma Rainey and taken on her traveling blues show, good stuff. The second half of the book grew tiresome to me, really redundant in a lot of items, going over that same ground again and again, I was glad to see the book end and also glad I found it. I’ve had Alexa play some Bessie Smith songs, they are all really old and scratchy, but you get a feel for the jumping aliveness of the music.
Profile Image for Morgan.
20 reviews2 followers
October 30, 2021
When Kay imagines Smith’s life—a rhythmic reciting of the contents of a lost trunk or a daydreamed conversation between Smith and her mentor Ma Rainey—this book transcends, taking you to the place Smith held deep within her, the well from which the blues flowed.
Those moments are so strong they carry the story overall, which at times feels more like an essay on Smith, a recitation of facts that framed the blues legend’s life. I’m sure this is due to lack of source material—but as a reader I wish Kay had been more courageous in filling in those gaps with imagined passages more often: America dreamed of Smith when she was famous; let us dream of the queen of the blues now, too.
Profile Image for Michael.
121 reviews
April 27, 2024
I enjoyed this book. An honest and probing assessment of Bessie and her turbulent life. The good, the bad, and the ugly. Written in a style I found both poetic and appropriate for author and subject. Bessie cries out from the pages. Her music not forgotten. A short life maybe but an enduring blues legacy.
Profile Image for Tara Lepore.
12 reviews10 followers
April 5, 2023
I expected there to be more cross narrative with the author's own life but I actually loved how there were just little glimpses. A haunting and passionate biography.
Profile Image for Moonkiszt.
3,039 reviews333 followers
November 15, 2025
Random reading brought this to me. . . .she had a hard life, but she made her own choices. A bohemian of the truest kind. I love that she got to do more than those who are so willing to conform. Still, there's more info about her sexual prefs than her music or poems.

The end of her life was tragic, and she was lost . . .but her voice is still out there and her songs are still being sung by others, and every so often she can be still heard thanks to recordings ringing out her blues and jazz.
25|52:17a
Profile Image for Jacquie.
82 reviews3 followers
March 3, 2021
She tells us about Bessie's life and delves into her lyrics but she mostly tells us why Bessie is important to the world and to her.

'My life was changed by Bessie's blues. My soul was converted. Any good art transforms you, makes you ask yourself questions about the world you live in, people, laws, yourself. Any good art can change the way you look at yourself.'

Her life was incredibly dramatic and there is so much missing from what we know about her despite her fame. Partly because of the time and because there was so long before the first biography that much information was lost. Jackie Kay leans into this in the telling and imagines what is missing, in clearly indicated and very beautiful ventures into the version she imagines. In one she describes the contents of a lost trunk of Bessie's effects that have made their way safely to Scotland rather than being lost, among them are

'A bottle of bootleg liquor and a pint glass with a lipstick imprint of the lips of the Empress. A horsehair wig - shiny black hair that once long ago ran all the way down to the round shoulders of Bessie Smith. A strand of pearls and imitation rubies. A satin dress. Headgear that looks like a lampshade in someone's front room with lots of tassels hanging down. A plain dress with beaded fringed.......A reject selection of songs that were never released. A giant pot of chicken stew still steaming, its lid tilted to the side. '

It is a good read and her love pours through the pages and it sends you back to the songs.
Profile Image for Vicky Burns Bellman.
24 reviews2 followers
October 12, 2021
'There is the perception, on the one hand, of the blues as lowlife (the view of middle class jazz fans and critics) and on the other hand, the blues as high life, royalty (for classic blues singers and their fans). This combination can't be bettered: the result is a Black working class queen'.

Such an interesting and moving short book, a book you could really feel. Particularly moving that this working class queer Black woman is profiled by a working class lesbian Black woman. This is the power of own voices - because I've read a fair few musical biographies in my time (of white people and people of colour, of straight and queer people) and they've never captured the meaningfulness of a contribution of an artist to the culture as this one did. Jackie Kay outlined both the meaning Bessie had to the Black community at the time, and the meaning Bessie had to Jackie growing up adopted in a white Scottish village. And by doing that she made the Empress come alive. A legacy that should be remembered forever; a keeper of Black history and legacy and longing.

The rage and tempest, the lack of impulse control, the generosity, the binges, the addiction. The chronic childhood trauma of early orphaning, and being raised by siblings. The mean men. The trauma of poverty and racism. A passionate heart and a pure gift. Rest well, Bessie Smith.
Profile Image for Jay Gabler.
Author 13 books145 followers
September 23, 2021
The brilliance of this book is that it embraces the Empress of the Blues in all her complexity. We start where Jackie Kay did, with competing images of the artist in agony and ecstasy; then we turn to the music, and learn more about the life. Along the way, Kay is frank about what we can know, what we never know, and what's none of our damn business. While few readers will achieve the depth of Kay's fascination, they'll at least all learn not merely to think of Bessie Smith when they're down and out: this singer brought joy to millions, as well as voicing their pain.

I reviewed Bessie Smith: A Poet's Biography of a Blues Legend for The Current.
Profile Image for Oliver  Crook.
46 reviews
December 31, 2021
Jackie Kay is a poet, who understands pain and loss and isolation like few others. Bessie Smith was a 1920s blues singer who rose to the top before tumbling back to nothing. Can I make it any more obvious? Kay retells Smith's stories with empathy, passion, and the right words in exactly the right spot. She reimagines Smith's intimate, most vulnerable moments, resulting in the three of us crying together. It transcends decades and distance to be truly stirring. The only criticism is that she didn't dare take the most artsy moments to the extremes.

Read more: https://atwoodmagazine.com/brbs-bessi...

Profile Image for Thamires.
1 review1 follower
December 15, 2023
É história de Bessie Smith e do blues, acho que são um só até, os dois se completam, Bessie Smith foi completa com o blues, com o blues ela não precisava mais de ninguém. A vida de Bessie smith só era ela e o blues, não importava mais nada e ninguém, nada que fosse tão importante para Bessie do que o blues. Todas as pessoas que cruzaram a vida de Bessie à decepcionaram, o blues foi o conforto que ela precisava. Bessie Smith não era apenas uma cantora de blues, ela era o blues.
Profile Image for Rebecca Stonehill.
Author 5 books57 followers
March 20, 2021
Fascinating account of the turbulent life and tragic death of 'Empress of the Blues' Bessie Smith. I listened to Jackie Kay narrating the audio and loved the way she wove in details of her own life and upbringing and how, as a young adopted black girl growing up in inner-city, predominantly white Glasgow, she became fascinated by Bessie Smith.
10 reviews
July 19, 2022
Great book!

Received this through and online subscription and I would never have chosen it, but I loved every minute.

A great insight into a true ku remarkable woman and her journey through the Blues scene.
173 reviews
June 29, 2023
I wanted the charm of the style to bump this up to a 3 star book, but during writing my review I was too annoyed to allow that.

First of all, I don't know how well this can be called a biography - a tribute to Bessie Smith is a better title. It's full of Jackie Kay's reflections on a handful of facts about Bessie Smith's life, Kay's own fascination with the singer, and imagined trains of thought for the most intense parts of Smith's life. I don't think that's an inherently bad way of discussing a singer, but I do think it would disappoint anyone looking for a straight biography.

Second of all, Kay's narration bothered me. It's frustrating because I love Jackie Kay - that's the whole reason I read this book! But she seems more focused on celebrating Smith and excusing any and all faults than writing a biography. In fact, Kay dedicates so much time to questioning Smith's objectively bad decisions and excusing her fist fights and drinking habits, that sympathy comes across as more important than analysis of a life. Kay is clearly a huge, lifelong fan, and that comes across as more important than any facts about Bessie Smith's legendarily messy life.

One of my big frustrations (and I had several) was the repeated analysis of Bessie Smith's lyrics and how they reflected her life. Only to mention later that she wrote a tiny fraction of her songs and potentially didn't even have a choice of what she sung. Yes, her lyrics are about bad men and being poor, and yes, she had that lived experience, but those are hallmarks of the blues genre. Kay mentions lyrics that are prophetic to Smith's life, and that's a fascinating coincidence, but she plays it like it's Smith's genius and that the singer somehow knew. The songs Smith actually wrote are a great example of her mental state, and Kay does some good linking of them to the timeline. That passage was super interesting. So why spend so much time comparing her life to lyrics she didn't write?

Another thing that bothered me was the question 'does Jackie Kay know any southern food other than pig's feet?' Don't get me wrong, it's referenced in one of the songs, but she brings up pig's feet literally every time she talks about food. It's a silly thing, but it pops up so regularly that you start to go 'did the people there eat anything else at all?'

And my final complaint is the way sexuality is discussed. Firstly, the emphasis on Bessie Smith being a lesbian when she married 2 men, had a long relationship with a third and slept with both men and women. What's wrong with calling her bisexual? Is it necessary to insist she was a lesbian or even to give her a label that she didn't pick herself? Secondly, I don't like the way she describes Ma Rainey. She fictionalises/elaborates on a rumour that Ma Rainey kidnapped Bessie Smith (which both women apparently deny) and gives her telling an explicitly sexual undertone, while saying 'Ma's arms are strong as a lesbian's.' She WAS a lesbian though?? And what is that supposed to mean? It's an uncomfortable indication of how many view lesbians - overtly manly, ready to steal and deceive, willing to do things to women without their consent. It's really distasteful and I was disappointed to read it.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
37 reviews11 followers
Read
May 19, 2023
I love Bessie Smith's music. And she's from my hometown, so she's a figure I also grew up with. So this should have really hit the spot. It's meant to be a blend of biography, fiction, poetry, and prose. But even the biographical bits are very speculative, and even though it's obvious the author did some research, it seems very unevenly applied. There's a lot of "she would have done this/it might have been like that." Frequently, these statements had no follow-up statement to justify why the author would even say those things. Like these:

- "She might have been addicted to the sugar in Coca-Cola to substitute for corn liquor." (I have no idea how she got here or why this is relevant. I guess every whisky drinker in Scotland who likes Irnbru is drinking it as a substitute?)

- "It was impossible to be a blues singer in the America of the 1920s without travel being in the blood." (What about Mississippi John Hurt, or anyone else who didn't get the opportunity to travel with their blues until the folk revival? Or ever?)

- "It was possible she would have never been in show business if it hadn't been for Clarence." (Given that she was already performing, this statement should really get some evidence.)

A lesser issue, but still relevant - in the first 25 pages she talks dramatically about it being cold at least three times in Chattanooga (like people standing out in the cold wind at the train station, or Bessie singing out in the cold) and when the sky is "hanging down low and mean and grey".... And instantly I'm transported, but to Scotland. Chattanooga is hot, and humid, and sunny, and rapidly thunderstormy at times and is really only cold enough for a light coat for three months in winter. Not even that, nowadays. So even as we're speculating about how Bessie's life went, I'm having to imagine some other version of that. Another reviewer described this book as fan fiction, and given how hard it is to trust the non-fiction elements of the book, that feels about right.
Profile Image for Holly Cruise.
336 reviews9 followers
December 8, 2021
I picked this book up on a whim at Queer Lit (Manchester) because it seemed intriguing despite the fact I didn't know any Bessie Smith songs, and the extent of my Jackie Kay experience was my mum leaving Trumpet at my house and it being on my 'to read' pile. So it's kind of great that I felt that odd impulse to grab this because not only is it a really great read, writing it helped Kay to finish Trumpet.

It's a biography, sure, but it's also a love letter to Smith, an attempt to understand her, and in parts an account of her importance to Kay herself as a black woman, as a person who feels emotions deeply, and as a fan of great music (I have now listened to some Bessie Smith - even through the crackling of time, she's clearly brilliant).

Each chapter sort of covers part of her life. Not strictly chronologically, often thematically, but always poetically. Kay inserts short bursts of fiction where she imagines with Smith and her friends might have been thinking. It doesn't feel gratuitous because it feels utterly sincere. Smith, after all, sang her life as song, why not have a writer write it as fictionalised biography?

There's a lot of repetition of themes, thoughts, moments, which has the effect of creating a quite hypnotic prose style. Maybe that works for a musician - after all, what are songs but often repeating chrouses, refrains, even verses?

It's a short read, and honestly worth your time even if you don't care for the blues. You will.
Profile Image for Anthony.
1,044 reviews
July 15, 2025
Jackie Kay (2021) BESSIE SMITH (AUDIOBOOK)
BorrowBox - Faber & Faber

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 5 out of 5 stars

BorrowBox writes, "BESSIE SMITH was born in Tennessee in 1894. Orphaned by the age of nine, she sang on street corners before becoming a big name in travelling shows. In 1923 she made her first recording for a new start-up called Columbia Records. It sold 780,000 copies and made her a star. Smith's life was notoriously difficult: she drank pints of 'bathtub gin', got into violent fist fights, spent huge sums of money and had passionate love affairs with men and women. She once single-handedly fought off a cohort of the Ku Klux Klan. As a young black girl growing up in Glasgow, Jackie Kay found in Bessie someone with whom she could identify and who she could idolise. In this remarkable book Kay mixes biography, fiction, poetry and prose to create an enthralling account of an extraordinary life."
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You'll have heard of Bessie Smith for sure if you've heard "Break My Soul" by Beyoncé enough times. Bessie is named right before Nina Simone and Kelly Row[land] in Beyoncé"s rap/riff. Bessie's life was all too short but nevertheless, she's a queer icons!
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#JackieKay #BessieSmith #Book #Books #Read #Reads #Reading #Review #Reviews #BookReview #BookReviews #GoodReads #Audiobook #Audiobooks #BorrowBox
156 reviews
September 17, 2021
Jackie Kay brought Bessie Smith to life with her wonderful prose. This was a no-holds bar account of a woman who had a voice that brought droves of people to see her but had several things against her that overshadowed her life - rampant racisms - she was African American, she was bisexual, she was a female, she was an alcoholic (which probably would have led to an early demise due to cirrhosis but it was a car accident that took Bessie when she was in her thirties) and due to her drinking Bessie Smith would become violent.
She was abused by her second husband - a no talent hack who only stole from her even after she died and by family who although they loved the gifts Bessie lavished upon them such as houses they couldn't even give the Empress of the Blues a proper gravestone. And of course Columbia Records took advantage of her and never paid Bessie any royalties despite the fact that one of her records sold over 780,000 copies in a seven month period and that was back in the 20's or the 30's. That was simply amazing.
Most music is derived from things that happen in life and Bessie Smith was one of the best, if not the best, at telling stories thru song whether it was the abuse she suffered or the hooch she drank. Another artist gone too soon.
Profile Image for Vance Cariaga.
Author 4 books5 followers
February 21, 2022
From the blog (vancecariaga.com): This book got a lot of attention in the UK, partly because Kay is a celebrated and much-honored writer in her home country of Scotland. In this book, she uses her experience as a mixed-race woman (half Scottish, half Nigerian) and lesbian to chronicle and analyze the life of legendary American blues artist Bessie Smith. During the 1920s, Smith was one of the biggest music stars in the United States. She was also a sharp businesswoman who earned a lot of money for the time, and took no crap from anyone – except for a cruel and abusive husband, who seemed to have a weird spell over Bessie’s mind, heart, and career. The book takes a deep dive into that relationship as well as many others (including love affairs with women), while the author uses her own experiences to expound upon the challenges Bessie Smith faced as a black woman in the American South. There’s enough to like here to make it worth reading, but too much of it starts to get repetitive, and the personal asides get in the way.
Profile Image for Emily Brownsey.
15 reviews
May 19, 2021
I loved this book. I felt so connected to both the author and Bessie smith from start to finish. In the beginning, Jackie Kay describes what it’s like to feel a sense of comfort, belonging and intimacy with a figure you’ve never met. I’ve also had this, what feels to be a life long fictional relationship with multiple artists whose voices ground me & ‘understand’ me; the likes of aretha, Amy, Paul weller, Brittany Howard etc. There’s one page where Jackie Kay describes the presence of these blues women, from how they shimmy to how their tragedy is portrayed in their lyrics and I must have read it 10 times. I was heartbroken to learn about Bessie’s abusive relationships and her difficult dynamic with her family, label and her money. An artist can “convert” your soul as Jackie Kay said, and I couldn’t agree more. This is a tragic story of an unbelievably chaotic blues woman that I plan to buy some records of if I can get my hands on some!
Profile Image for Gayle Slagle.
438 reviews12 followers
October 4, 2022
Bessie Smith: A Poet's Biography of a Blues Legend by Jackie Kay is not your usual biography. Combining historical facts about Smith with imagined scenes and ways in which she impacted and influenced the author's life, the book is a hodgepodge of facts, thoughts, and feelings. Kay is a black who was adopted in Scotland by white parents; when her father gives her a record by Smith as a gift for her 12th birthday, she identifies with the singer, who has a huge impact on her life. While I knew some facts about Bessie Smith, this book presented much information that I did not know in an interesting manner. While some may be distracted by Kay's writing style, I loved it for the most part. This book was a pleasure for me to read and I recommend that you give it a try.
15 reviews
November 15, 2024
3.5*. A tightly-wound and personal tribute to one of the most influential blues singers of the early 20th century. With relevant anecdotes from the authors own life as well as a mixture of both hard facts and speculation, Jackie Kay tells the story of Bessie Smith, from her humble beginnings in Chattanooga, Tennessee to her violent and tragic end. This book has no filler or fat, which I appreciated, offering an easily digestible and arresting insight into Smiths life and character. It’s overall structure is barebones and simplistic, but I think that rather adds to it’s effect. Overall a solid and enjoyable read.
17 reviews1 follower
December 25, 2021
I absolutely LOVE the Alberston version. It is probably my favorite biography ever. I was worried that nothing could top that one. From the description, it seemed like Kay was going to interject a poet's voice to the story. There were a few moments that felt different, very much in her voice, but for the most part, it felt very much like Albertson's book all over again. Fortunately, I loved the version and the subject matter so it still gets high marks but didn't quite deliver on the other front.
964 reviews18 followers
September 28, 2022
THE EMPRESS 3.5 ⭐️
I don’t know much about Bessie Smith so this was interesting and informative. The style is unusual but I didn’t object to that. The racism and domestic abuse she encountered was dreadful and I admired her even though I have little patience with heavy drinkers. Her death and funeral were very moving and I admired the way JK supported and understood Bessie. One reviewer thought it was unnecessary to comment on her weight as much as the author did but I don’t think this was done in an offensive way. I read this as part of Black History Month (a week early).
Profile Image for Tate Kaufman.
10 reviews
November 17, 2022
Starts beautifully and ends beautifully, but in-between it's dull, repetitive, and self-invested. The author's own misandry prevents her from understanding her subject - and leaves a lot of page space filled with complaints and confusion. How many times do we need to hear that Jack Gee was a bad guy? How many times does it need to be mentioned that Bessie sold 730,000 records, or that she liked to drink? It's a broken transcription disk of a Wikipedia page - and one written with immense bias at that.
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