Madam St. Clair, Queen of Harlem

$24.95

Raphaël Confiant
9781944884567
True story of the rise of Madame St. Clair, the Martinican refugee who took Harlem by storm…

Description

Raphaël Confiant

Translated by Patricia Hartland and Hodna Bentali Gharsallah Nuernberg

Madam St. Clair, Queen of Harlem

ISBN: 978-1-944884-56-7 (pbk.)
978-1-944884-57-4 (ebook)

(December, 2019) 


 

Madam St. Clair, Queen of Harlem is the story of a real-life woman’s rise from the slums of Martinique to the heights of Sugar Hill during the Harlem Renaissance. In the years following her arrival on Ellis Island with little more than a razor and a slim roll of bank notes, St. Clair would become queen of the numbers game, facing off against both the black underworld and the white mafia. Traversing the era from the First World War, Prohibition, the Great Depression, the Second World War and the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement, she became an iconic figure of the Harlem Renaissance, as a ruthless lady gangster but also as consort and benefactor to such heroes of the movement as W.E.B. Du Bois, Countee Cullen, and Langston Hughes.

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“Madam St. Clair, Queen of Harlem pulls you into the life of an unforgettable woman, who will capture your imagination. This is a rare, whirling, energetic book.”

—Maurice Carlos Ruffin, author of We Cast a Shadow

 

“Life is a strange lottery… Baroness of illegal bets and muse of the black intelligentsia, Stéphanie St. Clair traversed the New York of the 20th century, bringing the Crime Syndicate to their knees and getting Harlem to its feet.”

—Slate (Fanny Menceur)

 

“This singular and little-known story allows Raphaël Confiant to portray an era of social and political violence, an era of major upheavals that also saw the emergence of the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement.”

—Jeune Afrique (Nicolas Michel)

Additional information

Weight 12 oz
Dimensions 5 × 8 × .5 in

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