Authentic voice rings true
Memoir tells rapper’s rags-to-riches tale
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.
U- God’s rough childhood influenced and shaped him. U- God was born to a single mom and they 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. It’s in the projects where he met some future Wu-Tang clansmen, including 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 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 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.
U- God also discusses personal trials like the shooting of his son and the overdose of clansmen Russell Tyrone Jones, a.k.a. Ol’ Dirty Bastard.