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Starred review from June 13, 2022
The late Emmy-nominated actor recounts his endeavor to overcome poverty, abuse, and addiction in this immensely inspiring and candid debut. Born in Brooklyn in 1966, Williams endured a difficult childhood marked by an absentee father, a suffocating and abusive mother, bullying friends, and molestation, before turning to drugs as a way of “letting me disappear from myself.” Employing the arts as a “form of rebellion,” Williams became a backup dancer and began appearing in music videos, where he started to unlearn “macho code” of suppressing his feelings: “If you push something down, it’ll find its way out,” he writes in one of the book’s many raw and moving scenes. “Jay-Z says we can’t heal what we never reveal. And it’s true.” A couple years later, Tupac Shakur spotted Williams’s headshot and launched his acting career in the mid 1990s, leading Williams to land his breakout role nearly a decade later as Omar on The Wire. While the intensity of his performances often reawakened Williams’s addiction struggles, he recounts how he used his hardships as inspiration “to bring others up” via organizations—such as his own nonprofit, Making Kids Win—that were dedicated to ending cycles of violence and poverty in marginalized communities. This bittersweet and poignant work will leave readers in awe.
December 1, 2022
Reading about Williams's insecurities and growing up the target of bullies makes it hard to believe he so fully embodied Omar on The Wire, one of TVs toughest iconic characters, who had no doubts about his life and choices. Williams's first break was as a backup dancer for musical acts and starring roles in music videos. From there, he modeled and began his acting career. He discusses his addiction at length and is clear that he would never be free of it. Raw and vulnerable, narrator Dion Graham helps listeners relate to the poverty, success, addiction, and struggles that led to Williams advocating for criminal justice reform, helping at-risk youth, and giving back to the community. The examination of his past and a direction for the future illuminates an unlikely journey. While Graham never disappoints, it would have been amazing to hear this in Williams's own voice. Unfortunately, this memoir was not finished when Williams died of an accidental overdose in September of 2021 at the age of 54. VERDICT This powerful audiobook reveals the humanity of a charismatic performer and is recommended for public libraries.--Christa Van Herreweghe
Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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