
My favorite book of July was Words for My Comrades. I was a teenager in the 90s & like most at that time listened to Tupac. Learning more about his upbringing & his mom gave me a deeper understanding of who he was & his music. #12Booksof2025

My favorite book of July was Words for My Comrades. I was a teenager in the 90s & like most at that time listened to Tupac. Learning more about his upbringing & his mom gave me a deeper understanding of who he was & his music. #12Booksof2025

Well researched and utterly fascinating. The last 2 chapters felt like the author ran out of time. He was a bit scattered in pulling everything together. However, the rest of the book is much more polished.
While the author doesn't explore the myriad theories surrounding Tupac's murder, I am more convinced than ever that he and Biggie were cointelpro-ed.

I'm reading the tagged book, so I'm also revisiting 2Pac's albums in chronological order. I know his first album isn't considered his best musically or production-wise. But he had so much to say! I find the power of the words overshadows any production short-comings.
#tuesdaytunes @TieDyeDude

Reading and eating take out in bed because it's hot and the bedroom has the air conditioner.
#fridaynightreadinghour @mcctrish

“The trick is to never lose hope.”-Tupac Shakur I really loved this look into Tupac‘s life. The book is more about how his experiences in his life shaped the artist that he became. His mom was a Black Panther & Tupac was raised in NYC area. He was exposed to the Black Panther Party & Young Lords that shaped his view of capitalism, racism, sexism, the police state. His music spoke out against the things he felt were harming people

Beach reading: my husband is sleeping, no kids to wrangle, enjoying the sound of the ocean & a good book