Didn't We Almost Have It All: In Defense of Whitney Houston

Didn't We Almost Have It All: In Defense of Whitney Houston

Didn't We Almost Have It All: In Defense of Whitney Houston

Didn't We Almost Have It All: In Defense of Whitney Houston

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Overview

Didn’t We Almost Have It All is a candid exploration of the genius, shame, and celebrity of Whitney Houston.

Named a BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR . . . SO FAR by The New Yorker
Named a BEST BOOK OF THE MONTH by the Washington Post

On February 11, 2012, Whitney Houston was found submerged in the bathtub of her suite at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. Since then, the world has mourned her death amid new revelations about her relationship to her Blackness, her sexuality, and her addictions. Didn’t We Almost Have It All is award-winning journalist Gerrick Kennedy’s exploration of the duality of Whitney’s life as both a woman in the spotlight and someone who often had to hide who she was. This is the story of Whitney’s life—her whole life—told with both grace and honesty.

Long before that fateful day in 2012, Whitney split the world wide open with her voice. Hers was a once-in-a-generation talent forged in Newark, New Jersey, and blessed with the grace of the church and the wisdom of a long lineage of famous gospel singers. She redefined “The Star-Spangled Banner.” She became a box-office powerhouse, a queen of the pop charts, and an international superstar. But all the while, she was forced to rein in who she was amid constant accusations that her music wasn’t Black enough, original enough, honest enough.

Kennedy deftly peels back the layers of Whitney’s complex story to get to the truth at the core of what drove her, what inspired her, and what haunted her. He pulls the narrative apart into the key elements that informed her life—growing up in the famed Drinkard family; the two romantic relationships that shaped the entirety of her adult life: Robyn Crawford and Bobby Brown; her fraught relationship to her own Blackness and the ways in which she was judged by the Black community; her drug and alcohol addiction; and, finally, the shame that she carried in her heart, which informed every facet of her life. Drawing on hundreds of sources, Kennedy takes readers back to a world in which someone like Whitney simply could not be, and explains in excruciating detail the ways in which her fame did not and could not protect her.

In the time since her passing, the world and the way we view celebrity have changed dramatically. A sweeping look at Whitney’s life, Didn’t We Almost Have It All contextualizes her struggles against the backdrop of tabloid culture, audience consumption, mental health stigmas, and racial divisions in America. It explores exactly how and why we lost a beloved icon far too soon.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781419749698
Publisher: Abrams Press
Publication date: 02/01/2022
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 1,110,301
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Gerrick Kennedy is an award-winning journalist, cultural critic, and author based in Los Angeles. Kennedy is the author of Parental Discretion Is Advised: The Rise of N.W.A and the Dawn of Gangsta Rap. His writing has appeared in GQ, WSJ. Magazine, NPR Music, Spin, Playboy, Teen Vogue, Shondaland, Cultured Magazine, Men’s Health, and the Los Angeles Times.

Table of Contents

Foreword Brandy vii

Introduction 1

Didn't We Almost Have It All?: A Meditation on Loss and Memory 9

Under his Eye, Blessed be the Sound: Faith, Gospel, and the Almighty Power of Cissy Houston 23

Home: Newark and the Black American Dreams That Birthed Whitney Houston 51

Stuff that You Want, Thing that You Need: The Brilliance and Influence of Whitney's Voice 73

My Lonely Heart Calls: On Sex, Desire, and Sexuality 111

Miss America, the Beautiful: The Burden of the National Anthem and the Politics of Whitney's Blackness 147

Bolder, Blacker, Badder: The Sisters with Voices That Transformed Whitney 173

Tell the Truth and Shame the Devil: How Trauma, Shame, and Tabloid Culture Broke Whitney 205

The Undoing of Whitney Houston: Virtue, Vice, and a Requiem for Redemption 235

Won't they Always Love You?: Reflections on Meaning and Legacy 269

Acknowledgments 287

Notes 289

Index 295

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