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  1. In her autobiography Lady Sings The Blues, Holiday recalled how, in the course of the row, she uttered the old proverb, "God bless the child that got his own." The singer's anger over the incident led her to turn that line into a starting point for this song. The song was recorded on May 9, 1941, in New York.

  2. Torn by the need for love and approval from her snobbish grandmother and her alcoholic mother, Rosie rises on her own, only to become a victim of the American Dream. Review. This is a novel filled with a rage reminiscent of Ralph Ellison's or Ann Petry's . God Bless the Child's Rosie Fleming grows up in an apartment where killing roaches is a ...

  3. God Bless the Child may refer to: . Literature. God Bless the Child, 1964 novel by Kristin Hunter; God Bless the Child (picture book), a 2003 picture book by Jerry Pinkney of the Billie Holiday and Arthur Herzog Jr. song; Music "God Bless the Child" (Billie Holiday song), covered by many artists "God Bless the Child" (Shania Twain song)

  4. 23 de dic. de 2003 · "Mama may have, Papa may have, But God bless the child That's got his own! That's got his own." The song "God Bless the Child" was first performed by legendary jazz vocalist Billie Holiday in 1939 and remains one of her enduring masterpieces. In this picture book interpretation, renowned illustrator Jerry Pinkney has created images of a family moving from the rural South to the urban North ...

  5. The song "God Bless the Child" was first performed by legendary jazz vocalist Billie Holiday in 1939 and remains one of her enduring masterpieces. In this picture book interpretation, renowned illustrator Jerry Pinkney has created images of a family moving from the rural South to the urban North during the Great Migration that reached its peak in the 1930s.

  6. God Bless the Child is a masterpiece: visually stunning and emotionally appealing. Taking the words to Billie Holiday's and Arthur Herzog Jr.'s bluesy "God Bless the Child" as his text and inspiration, Pinkney depicts a family's move in the 1930s from the rural South to the industrialized North in what was known as the Great Migration.

  7. 23 de dic. de 2003 · The song "God Bless the Child" was first performed by legendary jazz vocalist Billie Holiday in 1939 and remains one of her enduring masterpieces. In this picture book interpretation, renowned illustrator Jerry Pinkney has created images of a family moving from the rural South to the urban North during the Great Migration that reached its peak in the 1930s.