This Thug's Life
-
- £12.99
-
- £12.99
Publisher Description
The first-ever insider account of the Shakur family, the iconic hip hop group T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E., and the life and death Tupac Shakur – written by Mopreme Shakur, the legendary rapper’s big brother and eldest son of Black liberation activist Mutulu Shakur.
Maurice. Little Mutulu. Mogie. Mocedes. ’Preme. Wycked. Mopreme Shakur has been known by many names. Fitting for a multi-hyphenate like Mo: hip hop artist and sole surviving member of T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E. and Outlaw Immortalz, soldier, writer, husband and father, filmmaker, record producer, and the big brother of, and co-collaborator with, the legendary Tupac Shakur, the greatest rapper of all time. The one thing Mo hasn’t done—until now—is to tell his story, one of complex family relationships, fame, tragedy, politics, musical innovation, and brotherly love.
Born in Flushing, New York, in 1967 and raised in South Jamica, Queens, Mo got an early education in what it meant to be a man of righteous New Afrikan values imparted by his activist and healer father, Mutulu. The son of revolutionry, Mo’s childhood was rife with unpheavals, inspiration, dramatic highs and lows, and unbreakable bonds of love. None stronger than when he met his new baby brother, Tupac. Mutulu said, “This is your brother. Hold his hand.” Over the more than two decades that followed, Mopreme never let go. As Tupac rose to transcendent heights in the industry, Mo was on Pac’s team as writer and collaborator, producer, stagehand, and sibling confidante. Everything Pac did, Mo was there—right up until the day Pac’s life was cut short in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas.
In his memoir, Mo shares not just an intimately personal story of family, but also one of resiliencce, a quest for racial justice informed by decades of struggle for Black liberation long before the Black Lives Matter movement, and of two brothers who rose from the streets to become icons. It’s insightful, inspirational, powerful, and authentically and unapologetically Black. As Mo himself would say: dig that!
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Shakur, stepbrother of rapper Tupac Shakur, paints vivid portraits of his family and hip-hop culture in his raucous debut. The author recaps a boyhood spent between North Carolina, Harlem, and Queens, where he fell in love with rap in the 1970s, and his later exploits rapping and producing with Tupac's Thug Life group. Opening sections celebrate Shakur's father, Mutulu, a charismatic founder of the Republic of New Afrika organization, before the narrative zooms in on Shakur's time with Thug Life in the 1990s. What follows is an entertaining picaresque featuring starstruck fans, celebrity cameos from Snoop Dogg to Madonna, and violent feuds ("There were several 9-millimeters onstage, including mine," Shakur recalls of an Atlanta show). Later chapters depict a darker Tupac after he was shot in New York and convicted of sexual abuse; the stepbrothers drifted apart after Tupac "disciplined" Shakur by forcing him to fight members of his entourage. It adds up to a rich, clear-eyed study of a rapper's life interspersed with uncompromising assertions of the author's values ("In what world do the cops not care about a dying child?" he wonders when NYPD patrolmen ignore his report of a Black kid getting hit by a bus). Readers will be rapt.