Terry Baker Mulligan, Penned In St. Louis, 6 May 2012
1. Penned in St. Louis: Terry Baker Mulligan
Sugar Hill: Where the Sun Rose Over Harlem by Terry Baker Mulligan
May 06, 2012 2:30 am
Theresa Jean Baker grew up in Harlem in the 1950s. She became a teacher, married a graduate of
Columbia law school and eventually moved to St. Louis. But Harlem was "the blueprint" of her
life, and Terry Baker Mulligan writes about it in "Sugar Hill" (Impulse Press, 293 pages,
$17.99). It just won an Independent Publishers Award for adult multicultural nonfiction.
What about your book surprises people? • It's all about surprises. When I came here in the
'70s, people thought Harlem was nothing but a crime-ridden black ghetto. I begged to differ. It
has soaring cliffs, a 300-year-old history, rich and poor, and a culture that has greatly shaped
America.
How is Harlem changing? • Harlem is gentrifying; it's flooded with tourists and so many whites
live there now.
2. What is your most cherished memory of childhood? • I have tons, but to choose one:
attending the Apollo during the 1950s and '60s, until I was 17. I saw big bands, Ella (Fitzgerald),
Nina Simone, Dinah (Washington), doo woppers, James Brown, you name it.