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In the late 1960s and early 1970s, if one wanted a book by Iceberg Slim, the latest anti-hero of the ghetto, they could not find it in a bookstore, but rather in a barbershop or an African-American liquor store. "Pimp: The Story of My Life" (1967) is a different type of American story, the tale of a young man determined to take what society does not want to give. It is a boiling, dirty, and raw portrait of the brutality, cunning, and greed of a pimp in the underworld of Chicago. A resounding warning told by a true survivor, it is as chilling today, nearly 50 years later, as it was on the day it was first published.
This is the story of Iceberg Slim's life: his secret inner world, the smells, the sounds, the fears, and the small triumphs in his peculiar realm, the ever-lurking dangers of prison, addiction, and death. A journey through the hell of a man who lived to tell the tale and ended up giving voice to the prostitutes and hustlers of the ghetto. The book that brought black literature to the streets once again shows the hip-hop generation what it's all about. What Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" was to ancient China, "Pimp" is to the dangerous streets.
Iceberg Slim's memoir, "Pimp," offers a raw and unflinching account of his life as a pimp in the underworld of Chicago. The narrative provides a gritty portrait of the brutality, cunning, and greed that defined the world of pimping. Slim's story serves as a resounding warning, told from the perspective of a true survivor, and remains as chilling today as it was upon its initial publication nearly 50 years ago.
The book offers a rare glimpse into Slim's secret inner world, chronicling the smells, sounds, fears, and small triumphs that defined his peculiar realm. It also explores the ever-present dangers of prison, addiction, and death that lurked within his chosen profession. Ultimately, "Pimp" serves as a journey through the hell that Slim navigated, and the voice he would eventually lend to the prostitutes and hustlers of the ghetto.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, "Pimp" was a revelation, bringing the raw realities of black literature to the streets. Much like Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" was to ancient China, Slim's memoir has become a seminal work that illuminates the dangerous world of the streets. It continues to resonate with the hip-hop generation, offering a stark and uncompromising glimpse into a subculture that is often shrouded in mystery and misconception.
product information:
Attribute | Value | ||||
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publisher | Capitán Swing Libros; 1st edition (September 3, 2018) | ||||
publication_date | September 3, 2018 | ||||
language | Spanish | ||||
file_size | 1607 KB | ||||
text_to_speech | Enabled | ||||
screen_reader | Supported | ||||
enhanced_typesetting | Enabled | ||||
word_wise | Not Enabled | ||||
sticky_notes | On Kindle Scribe | ||||
print_length | 398 pages | ||||
best_sellers_rank | #288,777 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store) #19 in Rap Music (Kindle Store) #54 in Society & Social Sciences in Spanish #160 in Children's in Spanish | ||||
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