Bongo Boy Magazine Summer 2018 Part One | Page 44

Think about that quote for a minute. People treated her twin sister better simply because she had lighter skin and hair that could be combed. This, folks, is at the beginning of the book. If that does not give one insight into the inspiration for her blistering brand of Blues I do not know what would. In the book the reader is given access to some of the most personal and painful details of Sheba’s life. Her mother had her first child when she was 14 years old. Her mother had been sexually abused by a family friend. This had a profound effect on Sheba as she recalls when she wrote “At times I went to hug her, and she pulled away...” We also learn that when Sheba’s mother was 18 she seduced another woman’s husband with the result being Sheba and her twin sister. The man never acknowledged that Sheba was his daughter. Sheba’s childhood in Mississippi was one of abject poverty. She lived in a very small house, before moving to a slightly larger one. The only problem was that this larger house was only half of a house, as the other half had been torn down. Eventually, her family was able to ‘upgrade’ to a shotgun house which is so called because the house is very narrow and quite long. Worse than the living conditions, however, was the lack of food. Sheba writes: “Food was something we never had enough of. I remember many nights going to bed hungry.” How can anyone read this and not feel for this little girl? Of her time in Mississippi Sheba has this to say: There is one thing that kept us going, and that was singing. We would start to sing, and it seemed like everything just went away. The heat from that big yellow sun, the hunger pangs, all of it just went away. This is where the soul of my music came from— those cotton fields of Mississippi. I didn’t get it from school books, or from someone teaching me; it came from within. Even when we were not in the fields singing, we were in church or on the porch late evenings singing. Sheba’s book not only gives insight into what it was like to grow up poor and black in the Old South, but she also answers some fundamental questions about a style of music that changed the world. Sheba writes: