HER DREAM OF DREAMS: The Rise and Triumph of Madam C.J. Walker
Beverly Lowry, . . Knopf, $27.50 (496pp) ISBN 978-0-679-44642-2
Sarah Breedlove was born in 1867 on the Louisiana plantation where her parents had been slaves, was motherless by age seven, married and a mother by 14, and a widow at 20. After leaving the plantation and working as a Mississippi washerwoman, she headed for St. Louis, another way-station on her journey to becoming Madam C.J. Walker, the first black woman millionaire. In 1905, Breedlove was still washing other people's clothes; in 1919, Madam Walker died in her magnificent mansion on New York's Hudson River. Whether through a vision or stealth and science (i.e., possibly copying Annie Turbo's Poro hair care products for black women), Breedlove developed an ointment that, together with her improvements of the straightening comb, took her from rags to riches. But she left little in the way of a literary legacy. "We have to find her," notes Lowry, a novelist and author of
Reviewed on: 03/24/2003
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 339 pages - 978-0-307-76595-6
Paperback - 496 pages - 978-0-679-76803-6