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Parental caution advised with Josephine Baker book

You are a kid with determination.

You set your sights on something, and it’s done. You don’t waste any time, don’t mess around — you want it and you’ll have it, one way or another.

For one little girl back in the early 1900s, it was the same: She knew she was going to be somebody, no question. And in the new book “The Many Faces of Josephine Baker” by Peggy Caraventes, you’ll read all about that girl.

When Freda Josephine McDonald was born in June 1906, her family had almost nothing.

They lived in “a succession of run-down, rat-infested dwellings,” and her mother took in whatever work she could find to make ends meet while she took her frustrations out on her daughter. When she was just 7, Josephine’s mother decided that Josephine had to go find a job.

At 13, Josephine was married for the first time and was single again a few months later. Around that time, she met some traveling musicians and their fame seemed awfully appealing. Josephine decided to go with them on their next tour.

On the few days that she actually attended school, Josephine was a “class clown” who loved to act goofy. That’s what she did in on her stage debut and audiences loved her. It was what eventually gave her the stardom she craved.

From St. Louis to Philadelphia (where she married Willie Baker at 15) to New York, Josephine became such an attraction that she was hired for a major production in Paris. She wasn’t sure she wanted to go, but racial issues were nearly nonexistent in France. In the end, she went to Paris. It was the best decision she ever made.

Parisians loved Josephine Baker, and she loved them back. Even as she traveled the world (including back to Missouri, where racism was as fierce as ever), she always returned to France. That was where she made her home, where she raised her “Rainbow Tribe,” and it was where she put herself in danger during World War II.

In her note at the open of this book, Caravantes says that that few know the truth about Baker’s life. Caravantes admits that she “struggled” in researching this memoir — and that admission, right from the beginning, sets the tone of “The Many Faces of Josephine Baker.”

Readers looking for the life story of Baker will find the usual: her rough childhood, her early career, her later performances, her loves and her childrens’ adoptions are included, all written in a style kids can appreciate. So far, so good — until you take into account the missing words here, incorrect facts and timeline confusion. These are things adults will notice but children might not, which exacerbates any accuracy issues.

Add in the many references to Baker’s sexuality, and parents of 10- to 13-year-olds may want to use caution with this book. Look through “The Many Faces of Josephine Baker” before you hand it to your child. You may determine that it’s not for her.

View publishes Terri Schlichenmeyer’s reviews of books for children weekly.

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