Bebe's by golly wow!
Author: Joe, Yolanda
A modern look at romance, friendship, and family follows the story of Bebe,
a fortysomething bank supervisor and recent college graduate, and her best friend,
Sandy, a young radio executive
New York: Doubleday, 1998, 289 p.
Stamford, CT: Longmeadow Press, c1992, 319 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: Melodrama mixes with murder in this banal first novel
about Yalies on the rise in Manhattan. Kayo, Connor, Michelle and Elizabeth
become best friends as undergraduates. Two of them are black: smart, ambitious
Kayo, from Chicago's inner city, aims for a career in investment banking, while
Michelle, a lit major from a family of Georgia preachers and schoolteachers,
seeks a professorship. Connor, a white banking scion and alumni brat, struggles
with econ grades while preparing for a job in the family firm, and Elizabeth,
an aspiring journalist and daughter of a New Haven cop and an alcoholic mother,
is a political activist. The cover-up of an accident in which they kill a bomeless
man so strains their friendship that when one of them is murdered the following
year in New York, the others are prime suspects. Joe uses wearisome clichds
to explore such themes as corporate racism and the problems of interracial dating,
meanwhile shifting the focus among her unappealing characters with formulaic
regularity. (Nov.)
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0681413964
1879360438 : Paperback
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 008326
Hatwearer's lesson, The
Yolanda Joe
Author: Joe, Yolanda
When her grandmother's sixth sense tells her that something is wrong, Terri,
recently engaged and working as an attorney in the north, initially refuses
to believe her but is nevertheless drawn back to her small-town roots.
New York: Dutton, 2003, 229 p.
School Library Journal Review: Adult/High School–Terri, a successful young lawyer in Chicago, has the physical attributes, material possessions, and active social life that many teens admire and aspire to. She's engaged to marry Derek, a sexy, charismatic, and equally successful professional man, but finds out that he is a philandering liar. When her beloved grandmother falls sick, Terri flies down to Arkansas to help care for her and soon meets Lynnwood, a man who seems like a good match for her–even though he doesn't have Derek's money and status. She is eventually faced with the choice of forgiving Derek and going through with her plans to marry him or pursuing a relationship with Lynnwood instead. This upbeat love story will appeal to young adults. The portrayal of Grandmother Ollie is particularly humorous and well crafted. With her quick and witty tongue, she offers her granddaughter words of wisdom and shares moving stories about her own experiences with men. Readers can pick up good advice for building positive self-esteem and choosing mates wisely. The rich imagery and lively dialogue of this novel will at times remind them of Zora Neale Hurston's romantic masterpiece, Their Eyes Were Watching God (HarperPerennial, 1994).–Joyce Fay Fletcher, Rippon Middle School, Prince William County, VA (Reviewed September 1, 2003) (School Library Journal, vol 49, issue 9, p240)
Publishers Weekly Review: Readers who know that success isn't measured by material
wealth will root for beautiful Terri Mills, a powerful attorney for the city
of Chicago, who comes to understand that false values could destroy her life.
Despite having grown up without parents or much money, Terri has made it big.
She's riding high until her fiancé, Derek Houser, cheats on her. His
smooth-talking apologies are none too convincing; in fact, his smarminess and
self-indulgence makes one wonder what she ever saw in the guy besides his Jaguar
XJ6. Yet Joe (Babe's by Golly Wow) makes clear that it's especially difficult
for a professional African-American woman to find a man who is not intimidated
by her smarts. Not to mention that Terri and Derek are the perfect power couple,
and Terri hates the idea of losing the fruits of their collective networking.
When Terri's beloved Grandma Ollie becomes ill back home in Collingswood, Ark.,
Terri rushes to her bedside. There, she has time to reflect on her muddled love
life, and Grandma Ollie offers additional insights by way of stories from her
own youth. Distracted by Grandma Ollie's dramatic past and Derek's long-distance
contrition, Terri doesn't realize that local rodeo superstar Lynnwood Conway
has fallen in love with her. The unassuming ease with which Lynnwood woos Terri
forces her to reconsider what and who truly makes her happy. This is a spirited
fairy tale for young black professional women with an ending as predictable,
and as satisfying, as one would expect. (Mar. 10)
— Staff (Reviewed February 10, 2003) (Publishers Weekly, vol 250, issue
6, p162)
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - Popular African-American Fiction
Other titles associated with this book:
Hat wearer's lesson
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0525947167
0452284872 : Paperback
1585473391 : Library binding - Large Print
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• School Library Journal, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20030920
• TID: 120137
He say, she say
Author: Joe, Yolanda
Radio executive Sandy persists in searching for the perfect love despite disillusionment,
while her best friend Bebe fights patriarchal politics and pursues her feelings
for jazz pianist T.J.
New York: Doubleday, 1997, copyright 1996, 262 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: The expectations set by the lively opening chapters
of Joe's (Falling Leaves of Ivy) second novel are not fully realized in this
candid but predictable story of four black singles searching for love in the
'90s. Sandy Atkins, a sales supervisor at a popular Chicago radio station, is
looking for a "good man to share my life with" when she meets jazz
pianist TJ Willets at a sales party. A player in more ways than one, TJ is waiting
for his big break and meanwhile avoiding all romantic commitments. While Sandy's
closest confidante, older and wiser bank employee Bebe Thomas, cautions her
eager friend to take it slow, TJ receives similar warnings from Speed, his widowed
father and best pal. Despite all advice, Sandy and TJ settle into a seemingly
monogamous relationship, until an ambitious, jealous coworker reveals herself
as one of TJ's recent lovers-just as Sandy is preparing a crucial presentation
for a prospective client. Devastated, Sandy turns to Bebe for comfort; as revenge,
Bebe concocts a plan to disrupt TJ's much-anticipated meeting with a renowned
musician, leading to a confrontation that forces the couple to seriously consider
their future together. Joe has a terrific ear for current hip-hop lingo, though
she doesn't establish distinctive voices among her four first-person narrators.
She creates likable characters with plausible histories, challenges and dreams,
but the final, unsurprising plot twist mars an otherwise satisfyingly breezy
novel. (Dec.)
Other titles associated with this book:
She say, he say
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0385485077
0446605700 : Paperback - Mass Market
0708958710 : Hardcover - Large Print
1561007250 : Cassette - Audio
1561009628 : Cassette - Audio
1561003492 : Cassette - Audio
1567401988 : Cassette - Audio
Credits:
• Hennepin County Public Library
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20010101
• TID: 036400
My fine lady
by Yolanda Joe
Author: Joe, Yolanda
Talented young singer Imani is surrounded by men with their own interest in
her career--including her father, her boyfriend, and Orenthal Hopson, who believes
that he can transform her from a hip-hop diva to a traditional jazz singer.
New York: Dutton, 2004, 288 p.
Publishers Weekly Review: Bestseller Joe's latest gives a nod to My Fair Lady—and,
like the musical, it's predictable but plenty of fun. Imani Holland has a voice
like "velvet on fire," and she raps the lyrics her boyfriend, Taz,
writes; together they're gonna make it big. At an unofficial competition at
the local college campus, Imani catches the attention of Orenthal Hopson, a
gifted young musician and academic. Hopson's been butting heads with department
chair Perkins over his theory of music's transformative powers, and Imani's
raw talent makes her the perfect test—Perkins will give Hopson three months
to make Imani into a jazz diva. "Mother Nature had just been darn right
good to the brother" Hopson, but Imani dismisses him as too "uptown"—that
is, until she catches Taz getting a lap dance from a groupie and decides to
give the professor a call. Hopson exposes her to new music, offers elocution
and singing lessons and gives wardrobe advice. In turn, Imani's uninhibited
spirit helps the uptight Hopson loosen up. Meanwhile, Imani's dad is in trouble
with the local loan shark and his strongman, Biggie (who's also Taz's best friend
and Imani's best friend's older brother). Imani feels pushed and pulled—she's
still got a thing for Taz, but he keeps misbehaving. When she finally falls
for Hopson, it turns out that he's capable of betrayal, too. Joe (The Hatwearer's
Lesson) is prone to pseudo-profundities ("Where do we flee when something
we trust breaks?"; "The essence of love can't be penetrated because
it's too deep"), but it's impossible not to root for spunky, ambitious
Imani. The inevitable happy ending is the perfect finale. (Apr. 12)
— Staff (Reviewed March 1, 2004) (Publishers Weekly, vol 251, issue 9,
p48)
Other related features:
1. Annotated Book List - Popular African-American Fiction
ISBNs Associated with this Title:
0525948082
0452286182 : Paperback
0786271450 : Hardcover - Large Print
Credits:
• Novelist/EBSCO Publishing
• Baker & Taylor
• Booklist, published by the American Library Association
• Publishers Weekly, A Reed Elsevier Business Information Publication
• Added to NoveList: 20040320
• TID: 122469
This just in ...
A novel by Yolanda Joe
Author: Joe, Yolanda
Five remarkable women take on the cutthroat world of broadcast news as they
work together at WKBA in Chicago, in a story of family, friendship, and office
politics
New York: Doubleday, copyright 2000, 281 p.