Bebe Moore Campbell
- In full:
- Elizabeth Bebe Moore Campbell
- Born:
- Feb. 18, 1950, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.
- Died:
- Nov. 27, 2006, Los Angeles, Calif.
- Also Known As:
- Elizabeth Bebe Moore Campbell
Bebe Moore Campbell (born Feb. 18, 1950, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—died Nov. 27, 2006, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American novelist and essayist who examined race relations and mental illness in her work.
In 1972 Campbell received a degree (B.S.) in elementary education from the University of Pittsburgh. She taught in Atlanta for five years and worked as a freelance journalist. Her debut novel, Your Blues Ain’t Like Mine, was published in 1992. Inspired by the murder of Emmett Till in 1955, it followed the aftermath of the killing of a black Chicago boy by a white man in Mississippi. Campbell continued to broach issues of race in novels such as Brothers and Sisters (1994), in which the African American protagonist must navigate the complexities of racism and sexism in the corporate world; Singing in the Comeback Choir (1998), which illustrates the sometimes jarring shift in values catalyzed by the social mobility of young black professionals; and What You Owe Me (2001), the story of a betrayed friendship between an African American woman and a Holocaust survivor. The novel 72 Hour Hold (2005) chronicles the efforts of a mother trying to help an adult daughter suffering from bipolar disorder.
In addition to her novels, Campbell was the author of the nonfiction Successful Women, Angry Men: Backlash in the Two-Career Marriage (1986). She also published two picture books, Sometimes My Mommy Gets Angry (2003), which attempts to explain mental illness to children, and Stompin’ at the Savoy (2006), an account of the origins of jazz. Campbell’s play Even with the Madness, further reflective of her interest in the effects of mental illness on family life, was first staged in 2003. Her 1989 autobiography Sweet Summer: Growing Up with and Without My Dad documents a youth spent alternating between her maternal and paternal families.