“Madame Queen: The Life and Crimes of Harlem’s Underground Racketeer, Stephanie St. Clair” by Mary Kay McBrayer
c.2025,
Park Row Books
$30.00
256 pages
Maintain your eyes on the prize.
If you’d like one thing sufficient, you’ll by no means, ever lose sight of that objective. You’ll do what it takes to attain it, letting it linger in your desires at night time and dictate the place you reside, who you reside with, the place you’re employed, and what you do. By no means look away, maintain your eyes on the prize. As you’ll see in “Madame Queen” by Mary Kay McBrayer, it is likely to be value it.
It’s seemingly that younger Stephanie St. Clair realized to lie from her mom.
Ancelin, says McBrayer, knew her daughter was “shrewd.” She in all probability figured that sending Stephanie alone on a ship from Guadalupe to New York was an opportunity for the woman to “spin straw into gold,” by no means thoughts that Stephanie was simply 13 years previous. Nonetheless, it quickly grew to become apparent that Ancelin was appropriate: Stephanie took the ruse additional and informed a ship’s employee that she was twenty-three.

The 12 months was 1911 and Stephanie arrived in New York, to a house for younger feminine immigrants. McBrayer doesn’t imagine that Stephanie made many mates there, however she saved her eyes open to alternative, discovering on the White Rose Dwelling for Coloured Working Women that she was good with numbers. There, she was additionally taught to stitch, clear, get monetary savings, and how one can comport herself as a woman.
Simply past the doorways of the house, she realized to shoot cube.
She was with a person who was courting her when she realized to play the numbers.
Although it’s a indisputable fact that she married George Gachette not lengthy afterward, Stephanie by no means immediately talked about it wherever, nor did she point out the kid that they had or the day she rented a room in Harlem and abruptly left them each. She took a job at a costume manufacturing facility; later, she moonlighted at a financial institution, and started to plan.
From then on, says McBrayer, “She was investing in her personal future…”
She was additionally constructing her personal crime empire.
In her introduction, creator Mary Kay McBrayer explains how this ebook got here to be: she learn one thing about Stephanie St. Clair and went in seek for extra however data was scarce. She admits that she inferred a lot and made up lots to craft this story. She calls it “artistic nonfiction,” and in “Madame Queen,” it really works.
Such conjecture, in truth, really works higher as a result of McBrayer serves as a type of narrator in Stephanie’s story, filling within the many, many blanks with believable conversations and sure information that she backs up with sound reasoning. Certainly, the imaginary oozes between the reality to make this really feel like a novel, however with occasional reminders that actuality is someplace, inside, exterior, or close by. It’s a story informed with high-quality sleuthing, dogged journalism, a well-described backdrop, and a contact of apparent admiration for its topic.
Readers who love biographies and may settle for some hypothesis will devour this ebook, as will followers of historic novels, Nineteen Twenties historical past, and The Sopranos. Search for “Madame Queen,” It’s a superb shock for the eyes.