Review of Make a Pretty Sound: A Story of Ella Jenkins—the First Lady of Children’s Music

Make a Pretty Sound: A Story of Ella Jenkins—the First Lady of Children’s Music Make a Pretty Sound: A Story of Ella Jenkins—the First Lady of Children’s Music
by Tracy N. Todd; illus. by Eleanor Davis
Primary    Chronicle    48 pp.
1/25    9781452170640    $19.99

Ella Jenkins (1924–2024) longed to make music from the time she was a little girl growing up in the segregated Bronzeville community of Chicago. “Ella is a South Side girl, a Bronzeville bird, skipping in streets that smell of sweets and black-eyed peas.” In this engaging picture-book biography, Todd writes lyrically about the girl who would become a celebrated musician and release more than sixty albums for children. Ella was surrounded by music and rhythm throughout her childhood, whether it was the choirs she heard at local churches, “recess rhymes,” or her uncle Flood’s “silver slip” (harmonica). She was also introduced to world music through record stores and saw artists such as Cab Calloway and Louis Armstrong perform. After high school, she moved to San Francisco, where she lived in an integrated community for the first time and was exposed to new forms of music. She went to college, became a teacher, and learned to play the conga drums. Upon returning to Chicago, she participated in civil rights protests and continued to teach before becoming a full-time musician. Davis’s digital illustrations, with lots of rich, saturated colors, are detailed and energetic. Double-page spreads on black backgrounds with pops of yellow musical notes and stylized stars showcase musicians and dancers, capturing the excitement and joy of live performances. Gatefolds at the back of the book contain an author’s note and additional information about Jenkins. Front and back endpapers feature a timeline of her life. A selected bibliography is appended.

From the ">January/February 2025 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

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