"Raw: My Journey into the Wu-Tang" (Picador), by Lamont U-God Hawkins
Another celebrity memoir has graced the genre, and this time it's from a lesser-known member of the multiplatinum rap group Wu-Tang Clan.
"Raw: My Journey into the Wu-Tang" by Lamont "U-God" Hawkins tells a classic rags-to-riches tale, from drug dealing on the streets of New York City during the crack epidemic in the 1980s to fame and fortune. It's a nostalgic look back on hip-hop music and the wild times in New York City before it became a playground for the rich.
Like many rappers, U-God's rough childhood influenced and shaped him. U-God was born to a single mom, and the pair lived in public housing in Brownsville, Brooklyn, the same neighborhood Mike Tyson comes from. During his childhood, U-God moved with his mother to the Park Hill projects on Staten Island. Still, it's in the projects where he met some of his future Wu-Tang clansmen.
"Death was always a part of my life," Hawkins writes. "I remember the first time I saw somebody die. I was only about four or five years old."