It's an easy read though.
I found it way too loquacious to continue. I think I gave it away.
Yeah.....I don't know if I really buy his story. Maybe he's that guy but but he was too much of everything. He was the tough gangster no one could fukk with, won all his fights, outsmarted the teachers, out smarted his peers, bagged all the ladies.....
It was almost like if some form of his character didn't resonate with you, just keep reading, he's got one for you.
And ive read those stories where people tell who they are and how they got there and what they've learned. Those are written in a style of: here's the lesson.
All of his stories just left me with a "I'm the shyt" and that's what you need to know, but there's some lessons too. Almost like he brags about everything he says he experienced.
Yeah I've seen him on social media (someone linked him here). It's almost like he wants to be pro black/anti c00n but is happy riding in the middle. He'll say some shyt that's pro black then say some shyt that's c00ning. I saw he wrote a book and decided to read it and see what was up. He's like a John Everyman. I don't dislike him as a person hope he continues to do well and hopes he motivates or inspires others. He didn't do it for me.I copped it early on during the pandemic cause K. Samuels basically boosted everybody's signal on the algorithm.
First I was into hearing what he had to say, but it just got too "out there" for me to stop giving him my full attention...and then any attention at all.
Piranesi was fly just in the sense that the author tried to do something different than the typical in modern day fantasy and created this "house of beauty" so to speak that enabled dude to kind of really find the meaning of life, for him at least.
Spoiler
What'd you make of him being Ghanaian/Half Ghanian and put into what was essentially a barefoot slave serving his master?
Her other super popular book, one of the key characters, "Steven", he's a Black man in England, arguably tortured, and then kept at bay by the main villain who is promising to reveal his name.
I'm not gonna hold you....I read that part of the reveal and it did give me pause. I'm just not sure it gave me enough pause to say his captivity was essentially reframed in my eyes.
I'm not familiar with the other joint, but as far as this one goes, she doesn't actively place emphasis on race at any point in the story, but inherently when you make that decision to include that, it does make you question some things from a colonial standpoint.
I'm kind of still sitting with it and feel like it was subtle enough to not be taken in a bad way but if this is like, kind of her bag or whatever, I might have more questions.
I read it one night. It was that gripping. With Piranesi, I let it slide, but I NOTICED...and I also noticed that no one else noticed when I was reading the reviews.
Racist Imagery, benign or not, conscious or not, sticks in my mind. I guess too much Public Enemy and Brand Nubian and Malcolm X as a youth. *shrugs* *adjusts kufi*
It's the long book (Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell), where I was like - the whole cast is white, and it's England, but you have 1 black character and torture him over slavery? Hmm.
Any time white authors involve Black/African characters, my Farrakhan Sense perks up. No Latinos? No "Chinamen"? No Ay-rabs? No gypsys? No Red Dots or Feathers? But you manage to fit a Black person into your story....hmmmmmm

Hadrian in for some shyt. Those visions he received from the Brethren were crazy.