Edmonton Journal

Authentic voice rings true

Memoir tells rapper’s rags-to-riches tale

- TRACEE M. HERBAUGH

Raw: My Journey into the Wu-Tang Lamont U-God Hawkins Picador

Another celebrity memoir has graced the genre, and this time it’s from a lesser-known member of the multi-platinum rap group Wu-Tang Clan.

Raw: My Journey into the Wu-Tang, by Lamont U- God Hawkins, tells a classic rags-toriches 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 neighbourh­ood 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, including Wu-Tang de facto leader Robert Diggs, a.k.a. RZA (also born in Brownsvill­e).

“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.”

For children like U- God in the Park Hill projects, opportunit­ies other than selling drugs were scant. He learned to sell crack, manage others underneath him in the chain of command and the beginning of rap.

In a refreshing departure from the typical ghost-written celebrity memoir, it seems much of U- God’s own voice has been retained. There’s ample slang, cursing and sexist language — to the point that some readers might be turned off. But as the title suggests, the book aims to give a raw account of his life.

Hip-hop fans will appreciate plenty of behind-the-scenes looks at the lifestyle of a rich and famous rapper. Once Wu-Tang became known worldwide, there was ever-present booze, women and partying with other celebritie­s.

Yet, the book isn’t an entire recount of years spent travelling and partying in mansions. There are rivalries among bandmates over money and recording time. U- God also discusses some personal trials like the shooting of his son and the overdose of clansmen Russell Tyrone Jones, a.k.a. Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

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