A vibrant, deeply researched biography of ALelia Walkerdaughter of Madam C.J. Walker and herself a central figure of the Harlem Renaissancewritten by her great-granddaughter.
Dubbed the joy goddess of Harlems 1920s by poet Langston Hughes, ALelia Walker, daughter of millionaire entrepreneur Madam C.J. Walker and the authors great-grandmother and namesake, is a fascinating figure whose legendary parties and Dark Tower salon helped define the Harlem Renaissance.
After inheriting her mothers hair care enterprise, ALelia would become Americas first high profile black heiress and a prominent patron of the arts. Joy Goddess takes readers inside her three New York homesa mansion, a townhouse, and a pied-a-terrewhere she entertained Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Paul Robeson, Florence Mills, James Weldon Johnson, Carl Van Vechten, W.E.B. DuBois, and other cultural, social and intellectual luminaries of the Roaring Twenties.
Now, based on extensive research and Walkers personal correspondence, her great-granddaughter creates a meticulous, nuanced portrait of a charismatic woman struggling to define herself as a wife, mother, and businesswoman outside her famous mothers sphere. In Joy Goddess, ALelias radiant personality and impresario instinctsat the center of a vast, artistic social world where she flourished as a fashion trendsetter and international travelerare brought to vivid and unforgettable life.