My name is Kenji Nathaniel Jasper and I am author. But I know that in this
day and age "authors" come a dime a dozen. It is no longer an event when one of
our own publishes a book, or paints an image of our world which we find
familiar. To be honest these days there are far too many books to choose from
about our lives, whether we're old or young, married or single, gay, straight or
somewhere in between. There are more African American authors than there will
ever be time to read. But I can tell you that I'm one who who is definitely
worth your time, money and the word of the mouth I hope you'll provide the
minute you read my last line.You may have seen my name in the magazines and newspapers you read all the
time: Essence, VIBE, Honey, XXL, The Village Voice, The Charlotte Observer, The
Chicago Sun-Times, on Africana.com, etc. You may have heard my commentaries on
National Public Radio's The Tavis Smiley Show. Years ago you may have even seen
me during the first four years of Black Entertainment Television's "Teen
Summit." But it's fiction that I've been doing the longest. I wrote my very
first story at the age of nine, and I'll keep going as long as my lungs have
breath.
But I'm writing you because you've been on my mind lately. On my recent book
tour it was your faces I missed the most when I came through your town. I wanted
to hear what you had to say. I wanted to know which characters in my latest
novel, Seeking Salamanca Mitchell, might have moved you, and what things
remained in your mind long after you finished the final pages. But you weren't
there. And that isn't your fault. It's mine.
Unlike many of the authors that your clubs might read, I am not
self-published. As a matter of fact I'm signed to the largest publishing company
in the world, a big entity owned by white folks with a lot of money and no clue
of how to use it to promote their authors, particular the ones of my shade.
Their idea of promoting a book is to schedule me in the middle of the week at
your local chain bookstore and think that people will just show up, like they
don't have to work, like they don't need to come home from a long day and take
care of their families no matter how much they might want to come and hear me
read from the book they heard about. And their idea isn't working, or at least
not in the way I'd like for it to. So I'm going to try things my own way.
I write stories about Generation X and Black America, which here and now
means folks in their 20's and 30's trying to find their way through a world that
isn't the one they dreamed about. And though they are young, their lives and
conflicts are shaped by souls older and younger, by their parents and
grandparents, by their lovers, haters, bosses, tormentors and everyone in
between. My first novel, Dark, deals the aftermath of a young man committing a
murder and being forced to leave his home for the first time in his 19 years of
life. My second novel, Dakota Grand, is an Atlanta man's story of the hip hop
music industry and how his dream job as a music journalist quickly becomes his
worst nightmare. And my most recent novel, Seeking Salamanca Mitchell, is the
epic love story of a man and a woman separated by time, prison and the evil man
who was supposed to protect both. Yet the two remain determined to find each
other again and be a family no matter what the cost.
I am reaching out to you and your clubs because it is you who wield the most
power within our community. The books you choose make their way into the hands
of your membership, who in turn pass them on to others outside of the circle.
Before you know it ten becomes 10,000. A book can become a movement. If you
don't believe me ask E. Lynn Harris
or Michael Baisden
about how they got started. Barnes and Noble and Borders don't tell you what to
read. You tell them. Then they order
and shelve what keeps you coming back for more.
I'm writing this in hopes that you and your clubs will choose me, that you
will open your lists to a young author (I am 28 and published Dark at 25) who
promises to give you a different reading experience, one which will travel past
your monthly meetings, one whose stories will not only remind you of people you
know, but will also give you reason to pay attention to the folks you don't, and
even a few you may have forgotten about. My name is Kenji Nathaniel Jasper and I
am an author. If you'd like to learn more about me please log on to
www.kenjijasper.com or look for my work
at your local bookstore.
—Kenji Jasper 2004
Snow
Click to order via Amazon
ISBN: 1601830017
Pub. Date: February 2007
Format: Paperback, 368pp
Publisher: Urban Books
From acclaimed author Kenji Jasper comes an edgy, gripping new novel that
asks if family life turns a hustler soft-or just hardens his heart.
He Killed For Hate.
Life on the darker streets of D.C. can turn a clean kid grimy. Snow was one
of those good kids-until a gang killed his next door neighbor and he decided to
settle the score. But doing what he thought was right only plunged him deeper in
a deadly game. Now he's a killer for hire, a grown man who's willing-and able-to
do anything necessary to survive. But even a cold-blooded hit man has a heart.
Now He May Die For Love.
When Snow falls in love and becomes a father, he's more willing than ever to
do what it takes to support his woman and his baby girl. But what that means for
a hit man and what it means for a family man are two very different things. When
the clash between his home life and his street life threatens to explode, Snow
decides to make one last score to put his family on easy street, and get out of
the game. But as much as he wants to break out, there's someone just as
dangerous, and just as determined to keep Snow right where he is.
House on Childress Street:
A Memoir of My Grandfather
Click to order via Amazon
ISBN: 0767916794
Format: Paperback, 272pp
Pub. Date: January 10, 2006
Publisher: Harlem Moon
Read an Excerpt from House on
Childress Street
Jesse James Langley, Sr., was married to his wife, Sally, for more than fifty
years and fathered four children. To his grandson, Kenji Jasper, he was an
enigmatic figure, a man who declared himself “The Lone Ranger” and kept to
himself during family gatherings. Still, he became a mainstay in his grandson’s
life, and when he passed away, Jasper’s grief was profound.
Determined to learn more about the man he loved but barely knew, Jasper sought
out various family members and spoke to them about his grandfather’s influence.
His journey took him along the dirt roads of the South, to the ghettos of
Washington, D.C., and into the nightlife of New York City. Jasper also ventured
into previously unexplored emotional territory where he gained a deeper
understanding of his parents’ tumultuous marriage and the relationships other
family members had to each other and to the Lone Ranger.
Jasper has written an intensely personal memoir and a fascinating chronicle of
African American history. Through the oral histories of his family, Jasper
brings to life the Great Migrations from the South, the urban areas of the
North, and his generation’s disconnection from the values of older generations.
Filled with moving revelations and infused with warmth and humor, The House
on Childress Street is a remarkable contribution to the canon of African
American memoir.
Seeking
Salamanca Mitchell: A Novel
Click to order via Amazon
ISBN: 0767916751
Format: Paperback, 355pp
Pub. Date: July 2004
Publisher: Broadway Books
Benjamin Baker knew love for the second time when his eyes met Salamanca
Mitchell's. The first came at age eleven, when he sat down at a piano to play
his first original composition. But both of those loves are nearly destroyed
when he goes to work for Alfonse Mitchell, Salamanca's father and a prominent
face amongst D.C.'s most powerful.
Seduced by the lure of easy money, Ben joins Alfonse's den of thieves, only to
earn seven years in prison when the burglary ring falls apart. What he is left
with, while his singing group goes on to stardom, and while Salamanca struggles
to raise Ben's daughter while on the run from her own father, is his dream of a
waiting family just beyond prison's doors. But the road to that reality is
littered with obstacles. Ben and Salamanca must each travel different roads to
get back to each other, fighting against their own fears and Alfonse Mitchell,
their greatest enemy of all.
Told in gritty, poetic prose, Seeking Salamanca Mitchell follows two
hearts through trials and hope and all that comes in-between them. It is a
thrilling story of love and danger that cements Kenji Jasper's reputation as one
of the finest writers of his generation.
Dakota Grand:
A Novel
Click to order via Amazon
ISBN: 0767910141
Format: Paperback, 288pp
Pub. Date: September 2002
Publisher: Broadway Books
Dakota Grand is a young music journalist who's left his Southern roots behind
and moved to the Big Apple to cover the rough-and-tumble world of rap. He's part
of the star-making machinery, spinning the web of interviews, reviews, and
"inside stories" that move the CDs off the racks. He's good at this, but all
it's gotten him so far is an apartment in deepest Brooklyn, a check-to-check
freelancer's existence, and a hit-and-run love life. When the break of his
career comes: the opportunity to interview one of his rap heroes, Mirage, one
half of the legendary group Arbor Day, for a cover story for The Magazine.
Puffing on a spliff, Mirage spills plenty of beans to Dakota Grand, but he's
less than pleased by the resulting article, In fact, he has his boys assault
Dakota in a midtown elevator and send him to the hospital. What ensues is an
increasingly tense and violent duel between Mirage and Dakota Grand, with the
young writer determined to fight back for his own honor and that of his fellow
journalists.
Dark: A Novel
Click to order via Amazon
ISBN: 0767907078
Format: Paperback, 256pp
Pub. Date: June 2001
Publisher: Broadway Books
Thai Williams is walking a thin line between two worlds. On one side he has
his job as a filing clerk for the Washington, D.C., Department of Public Works,
his girlfriend Sierra, and his plans for going to college. But on the other,
darker side there are his friends Snowflake and Ray Ray, men who run the
neighborhood streets dodging the dangers of the criminal life and its
aftereffects. But that thin line disappears when Thai walks in on Sierra with
another man, whom he eventually kills in a haze of jealousy and confusion. From
there Thai finds himself on the run and away from the five-block stretch where
he's lived for all his life. He finds his way to Charlotte, where Enrique, his
closest friend of all, has moved in search of a better life. In the course of
the week that follows, Thai encounters a series of men and women who show him
aspects of life he never dreamed of in his narrow ghetto existence. All of them
are looking for answers, but it is Thai who must find his own path out of the
dark and into the clear light of moral responsibility and repentance for his
actions
Related Links
Links Last Updated August 2004
Official Website
www.kenjijasper.com
Remembering Dark Streets
A New Novel Looks at the Life in Inner-City Neighborhood
http://www.npr.org/programs/wesun/features/2001/sept/010909.dark.html
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