Inside a Thug's Heart by Angela Ardis, Tupac Shakur (With)

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: May 2004
  • 208pp
  • Sales Rank: 30,140

    Reader Rating: (19 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2004
    • Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corporation
    • Format: Hardcover, 208pp
    • Sales Rank: 30,140

    Synopsis

    Rikers Island is the centerpiece of the New York City Department of Corrections, a sprawling prison city of concrete and steel with housing for more than 16,000 inmates. Early in 1995, it was also the temporary home of legendary rapper and actor Tupac Shakur, incarcerated for a crime he swore he did not commit. And it was there that Angela Ardis, acting on a late-night wager among her friends and coworkers, sent a letter, along with a photo and her phone number. To her utter delight and amazement, Angela's phone rang a short while later. Tupac Shakur was on the line. Over the next several months, Angela and Tupac shared a near-daily exchange of letters, poems and phone calls, and their relationship quickly grew into something neither of them could quite define, a kinship of souls that touched each in unexpected ways. Those original poems and letters, many of them written after Tupac's transfer from Rikers to Dannemora State Prison, are presented here, along with the increasingly passionate and personal phone calls that touched on every subject imaginable. Far from the media spotlight, Tupac was by turns playful, sensual and serious, offering sharp observations on prison, music and the uncertainties of life. His letters to Angela reflect how he felt about being shot five times and left for dead one terrible night in New York in 1994, and his heartfelt verse encapsulates his dreams for the future -- a future that would be so tragically cut short just over eighteen months after their correspondence began. Tupac Shakur was shot on September 7th, 1996 and died a week later from his injuries. His murder remains unsolved, an ending as enigmatic as his life. But while Tupac may be gone, his words live on here, giving every fan a rare glimpse inside the mind and unbroken spirit of a passionate and unpredictable musical icon.

    Customer Reviews

    Poetry Keeps This Book Goingby PennyLove

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    August 11, 2009: Tupac's poetry make this book worth reading. Some of it quite beautiful.

    Other times, I found his letters to be explicit and quite graphic. Every now and again, I'd catch a glimpse of Tupac, the real person, when he wasn't busy getting his sensual seduction on. Every now and then, he'd let Angela (the author) peep him out a bit as far as showing true emotion about his circumstances and his views on certain things as a man. He was quite complex and deep and at the same time he was silly and free spirited.

    Angela does her share of letter writing and poetry writing, too. But it is Tupac who is gifted with the pen and that gives the book what little substance it has.

    I Also Recommend: Rose That Grew from Concrete.

    Jasmine_20by buffy_20

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    June 28, 2009: I read this book when I was in the 10th grade it made me look at him as more of a man than just an artist...in this book he was touching so real so close to me in my heart...thank you...8-D


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