Paperback, 448
pages
Expected
publication: February 28th 2017 by Berkley Books
With their relationship
unwelcome in segregated Chicago and the two of them shunned by Leeba’s Orthodox
Jewish family, Leeba and Red soon find themselves in the middle of the Civil
Rights Movement and they discover that, in times of struggle, music has the
power to bring people together.
My Thoughts…
Windy City Blues is
a jazz story. Yet, the real story is
the lives of Negroes and whites in Chicago in the 1950’s. Red leaves the south and moves to Chicago
to make music. He leaves behind a
world where he had to use a separate bathroom, sit in a different area while
waiting for a bus, and so much more.
Thinking the north would be different he quickly realizes that it is not
all that different than what he left behind.
I found it interesting how accepting he was of his place in Chicago. He accepted that the life he was living is
what he should expect. I felt like he
could have pushed a little harder to get what he dreamed but yet knew there
would be repercussions to doing so.
The Chess Brothers,
which ran Chess Records, were heroes to me.
They not only stepped up and support the minorities when others were
turning their backs but they understood that their musicians were actually part
of their families. They respected,
took care of, and went beyond that of a boss.
The brothers paid them fairly, promoted them tirelessly, and helped them
out in their personal and professional lives.
I listen to music all day long. My radio is always on yet I have not
listened to much jazz music. Windy City
Blues makes me want to find a jazz station and just listen all day long. The music aspect intrigued me. I knew nothing about how records were made,
sold, and promoted in the 1950’s.
When I finished this book I found myself wanting to learn more about the
history of jazz in Chicago, the producing of music in Chicago, and Chicago
itself during the 1950’s.
Book Links
Advance praise for WINDY CITY BLUES:
"Renee Rosen's passion for her
subject matter is evident in every single word of WINDY CITY BLUES. This novel
about the rise of the Chicago Blues scene fairly shimmers with verve and
intensity, and the large, diverse cast of characters is indelibly portrayed
with the perfect pitch of a true artist."
—Melanie
Benjamin, New York Times Bestselling author of THE SWANS OF
FIFTH AVENUE
“A not-to-be-missed novel that hits
all the right notes.”
—RT Book Reviews, Book Club Top Pick
“Renee Rosen has written a fresh,
exciting, and moving account to the Chess story. Even for someone who has lived
much of it, I was still intrigued by this page-turner.”
—Terry Chess, son of Phil Chess, the Co-Founder of Chess
Records
“Renee Rosen does it again! With
gorgeous authentic historical detail and star-crossed lovers you can’t help but
root for, WINDY CITY BLUES is an up-tempo song of love, music, and the Civil
Rights movement.”
—Stephanie Dray, New York Times Bestselling
author of America's First Daughter
“Riveting reading, often
heartbreaking, with moments of pure elation.”
—Shelley Noble, New York
Times Bestselling Author of Whisper Beach
"Rosen captures
the birth of Chicago blues from its shabby inception to its raucous success
... I was engrossed by this novel.”
—Mary Morris, author
of The Jazz Palace
“Rosen puts real
characters on the stage and makes them sing and play for their lives. Racial
conflict--black, white, Jewish--is front and center, making the struggles and
triumphs as relevant to today's world as they were sixty years ago, strumming
the same heartbreaking, soulful, all-too-human riff."
—Sonja Yoerg, author of All the Best People
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