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New genre dubbed `street life` attracting young readers
New York, May 29: Jose Perez wasn`t interested in books as a child. They were boring, hard to understand. They didn`t speak to him the way rap and hip-hop did.
"They`re about people like me, and how they have to struggle and to hustle their way through life." Perez is a fan of a fast-growing genre dubbed "street life" by Hue-Man owner Clara Villarosa. "Street life" books _ also known in the publishing industry as "ghetto lit" _ are often highly profane and sexually explicit stories featuring guns, drug dealers and prostitutes. The prose can be as crude as the subject matter, but booksellers say they appeal to at least tens of thousands of young people who, like Perez, might not otherwise be reading. Although usually self-published or distributed by tiny presses, "street life" titles have caught on well beyond black-owned stores such as Hue-Man.
Barnes & Noble`s fiction buyer, Sessalee Hensley, says there has been "huge growth" in the market, with "B-more Careful" and Teri Woods` "True to the Game," a story of drugs and violence set in Philadelphia, especially popular.
In March, Random House Inc. published Y. Blak Moore`s "Triple Take," about an ex-convict in Chicago. Simon & Schuster recently signed up Holmes for a six-figure advance and will publish his next novel, "Bad Girlz," in the fall.
"I live in Harlem and I noticed a lot of people carrying `B-more Careful,"` says Malaika Adero, a senior editor at Simon & Schuster`s Atria Books imprint.
"When I first started selling these kinds of books I could get people to the next step _ something more literary," Fugate says. "But it`s a lot harder to do that now. With all the technology and the other media, things have changed so much. People just want to read the same kind of books over and over."
"Street life" books get the same criticism as rap music and violent films, and have the same defense: The books reflect reality and are intended to discourage, not glamorize.
"I only can write what I know," says Holmes. "I can`t write a romance novel, because I don`t know much about romance. I don`t write to put a shine on what`s going on in the street. I write to dissuade somebody from this kind of life. I try to preach without being preachy."
Holmes, 30, is a troubled kid who made good. Jailed from 1996-2001 on drug charges, he saw a fellow inmate working on a book. "I knew that I was smarter than him, and that if he could write I could write," Holmes recalls.
Holmes was still in jail when he completed "B-more Careful," the story of a girl who will do anything to get rich. "Greed set in and greed has the ability to blind a person, making wrong seem right and vice versa," he writes.
Holmes tried shopping his manuscript, but he had no contacts in publishing. So he turned to fellow author Woods, who distributed the book through her company, Meow Meow Productions.
"It`s all word of mouth," Holmes says. "It`s interesting. The things I write about are the things that got me locked up. Now, they`re feeding my family."
Bureau Report