Created at Wordle.net

Coteaching Reading Comprehension Strategies in Secondary School Libraries: Maximizing Your Impact

Billie Holiday, Lady Day - Torch-Singer
of the Harlem Renaissance

Researched and Presented by Judi Moreillon, Ph.D.


Home

Questions

Career

Connections

Works Consulted

Harlem Renaissance

 

 

Work Consulted

"Billie Holiday." American Decades. 1998. Biography Resource Center. Pima County Public Library, Tucson, AZ. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://0galenet.galegroup.com.librarycatalog.pima.gov:80/servlet/BioRC>.


Works Cited

Allan, Lewis. “Strange Fruit.” MetroLyrics. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://www.metrolyrics.com/strange-fruit-lyrics-billie-holiday.html>.

"Billie Holiday." MetroLyrics. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://www.metrolyrics.com/billie-holiday-lyrics.html>.

“Billie Holiday.” Wikimedia Commons. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Billie_Holiday_Lady_Day.jpg>.

"Billie Holiday - Strange Fruit." YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. Web. 27 Dec. 2010. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ZyuULy9zs&NR=1>.

“Eleanora Fagen.” Wikimedia Commons. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Billie_Holiday_1917.jpg>.

Holiday, Billie and A. Herzog, Jr. “God Bless the Child.” Blues for Peace. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://www.bluesforpeace.com/lyrics/god-bless-the-child.htm>.

“Lynching of a Woman - 1911.” Wikimedia Commons. 27 Dec. 2010. Web. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lynching-of-woman-1911.jpg>.

Terkel, Studs. Giants of Jazz. New York: HarperCollins, 1975.


About | Web Support | How-to Chapters | Pathfinders | Workshops | Presentations

Book Jacket

Launched: December 2010
Updated: 30 January 2012