Sister Souljah is best known for her work as a political activist and educator of underclass urban youth. A graduate of Rutgers University, she is a beloved personality in her own community. She lives in New Jersey City with her husband and son.
"[Souljah] spread[s] messages that are clear, concise, and true to
the game."
-- The Source
"Intriguing....Souljah exhibits a raw and true voice."
-- Publishers Weekly
"Sister Souljah has taken her talents from the stage to the
page."
-- Essence
"Winter is nasty, spoiled, and almost unbelievably libidinous, and
it's ample evidence of the author's talent that she is also deeply
sympathetic."
-- The New Yorker
"Winter is precious, babacious, and as tough as a hollow-point
bullet."
-- Salon.com
"[Souljah] spread[s] messages that are clear, concise, and true to
the game."
-- The Source
"Intriguing....Souljah exhibits a raw and true voice."
-- Publishers Weekly
"Sister Souljah has taken her talents from the stage to the
page."
-- Essence
"The #1 author of the hip-hop generation."
-- Sean "P. Diddy" Combs
"Winter is nasty, spoiled, and almost unbelievably libidinous, and
it's ample evidence of the author's talent that she is also deeply
sympathetic."
-- The New Yorker
"Winter is precious, babacious, and as tough as a hollow-point
bullet."
-- Salon.com
Hip-hop star, political activist and now writer, Sister Souljah exhibits a raw and true voice (though her prose is rough and unsophisticated) in this cautionary tale protesting drugs and violence among young African-Americans in the inner city. Winter Santiaga, the 17-year-old daughter of big-time drug dealer Ricky Santiaga, is spoiled and pampered, intoxicated by the power of her name and her sexuality. Riding high on the trade, Santiaga moves the family out of the Brooklyn projects to a mansion on Long Island where things start to disintegrate. Winter's mother is shot in the face by competing drug dealers, the FBI arrest Santiaga and confiscate the family's possessions. Then, while visiting her father at Rikers Island, Winter discovers her father has a 22-year-old mistress and a baby boy. For the first time, Winter feels anger toward her father and pity for her fallen mother. Being the ruthless hood rat that she is, however, Winter leaves her weakened relatives behind and sets off to regain her stature and reinstate her father. Attracted to power, intolerant of those without it, ill-equipped to deal on her own and predisposed to make all the wrong moves, she deceives and steals from those who help her and yet, somehow, she remains a sympathetic character. Winter's obsession with money, possessions and appearances, her involvement in the drug trade and the parade of men she uses lead her down the wrong path. Sister Souljah herself appears as a "fictional" character who voices her belief that Winter's vices are shared by many, and that greed, drugs and violence devalue the lives of urban youth. Souljah peppers her raunchy and potentially offensive prose with epithets and street lingo, investing her narrative with honesty albeit often at the expense of disciplined writing. But this is a realistic coming-of-age story of debauchery with a grave moral. Agent, Elyse Cheney. Author tour. (Apr.)
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