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Black Artemis

Author of Efrain's Secret

10+ Works 268 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Black Artemis, Sofia Quintero

Works by Black Artemis

Efrain's Secret (2010) 63 copies, 3 reviews
Show and Prove (2015) 57 copies, 1 review
Explicit Content (2004) 27 copies
Picture Me Rollin' (2005) 22 copies, 2 reviews
Burn (2006) 17 copies
The Arrangement (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

Take the Mic: Fictional Stories of Everyday Resistance (2019) — Contributor — 144 copies, 6 reviews
What You Wish For: A Book for Darfur (2011) — Contributor — 68 copies
Best Women's Erotica of the Year, Volume 4 (2018) — Contributor, some editions — 23 copies, 2 reviews
Iridescence: Sensuous Shades of Lesbian Erotica (2007) — Contributor — 22 copies
Politics Noir: Dark Tales from the Corridors of Power (2008) — Contributor — 19 copies, 1 review

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

7 reviews
“Being brown and broke has been a seventeen-year-test in just how badly I want an average life… Why does the valedictorian have to choose between my class ring and this SAT prep class? Why does a clean-cut teenager have to decide between showing up to my minimum-wage job and going to the movies with the most popular girl in school? Why do I have to fight so hard just for the mere chance to have it all?” (pg. 52. Quotes taken from ARC – language is subject to change.)

Efrain Rodriguez show more is the highest-achieving student at his high school in the South Bronx, and despite lots of people telling him that he will never get in (and couldn’t pay for it even if he did), he has his heart set on the Ivy Leagues. But money weighs heavily on his mind – his mom is working long hours just to get by, and his dad hasn’t exactly taken a strong interest in Efrain’s life since having a baby with his new girlfriend. Efrain feels like he needs to take his financial situation into his own hands, and his afterschool tutoring job doesn’t cut it anymore. So when an old friend who deals drugs approaches him with a chance to make a lot of money fast, Efrain thinks about all those choices he is forced to make in his life because of money. He surprises himself by saying yes.

As Efrain is drawn deeper into the world of dealing, and as his lies to friends and family multiply, the reader can feel the moment when everything falls apart looming over Efrain. You know that it’s coming, and that the fallout is going to be awful – it’s just a matter of when. And if that reader is me, the reader will be banging her head against a wall and shouting “No Efrain Stop Stop Stop No!” Because he genuinely doesn’t want this life, and he really doesn’t need this life if he will allow himself to rely on the people around him. But when Efrain starts to list the things that are stacked against him, you can feel his desperation and start to understand how he could possibly make this decision that goes against every part of his judgment and his sense of morality.

Efrain’s relationships with his girlfriend, mother, and sister, are well drawn, but his relationships with the men in his life are especially complex. Efrain grew up with two best friends, Chingy and Nestor, but the group split when Nestor started dealing drugs. Chingy will no longer have anything to do with Nestor, and his changing relationships with these two boys over the course of the book are one of the most compelling parts of the story. Nestor, who brings Efrain in to the drug trade, could easily have been a stereotype of the bad drug-dealing kid. At first glance that is all you see. But as the story digs down a little bit deeper into his life, he becomes a genuinely sympathetic character – a choice that makes the story much more interesting and less reductive. Efrain’s relationship with his absentee father follows a similar arc.

I did find the dialogue uneven, especially between Efrain and Chingy - sometimes it flowed freely and genuinely, and other times it sounded a little bit like a skit written by a guidance counselor about getting in to college. Efrain and Chingy go from slangy, loose conversations to this:

“In order to be as accurate as possible, I couldn’t just develop one code. I had to create a unique algorithm for each and every college.”

It takes me a second to grasp his point. “Because Hunter College may place more emphasis on your SAT score than, say, Harvard might?”

“Exactly! And there’s no way to assess that unless you talk to someone at every admissiosn office or, better yet, compile statistics on incoming freshmen.” (pg. 81. Quotes taken from ARC – language is subject to change.)

Suddenly we’re inside some kind of college admissions manual. I appreciate that the author is trying to get some information on college admissions into the hands of teens who pick up this book, but it could have been done a little bit more organically. And honestly, I’m a big fan of letting a story be a story.

While I found that I did have to suspend my belief a couple of times during the course of the novel, Efrain’s voice and his struggles were enough to pull me into the story.
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The Drive to Survive

Esperanza Cepeda, reformed ride-or-die chick, sees love doesn't concur all while she struggles to tow the line after her recent incarceration. As she sees herself moving ahead step-by-step, the pull of her ex, Jesus, lures her two steps back into the life that landed her in prison from jump street.

Dulce wants to show her sister, Espe, that they can rise above the environment in which they live, but past actions continue to haunt her future. Ending the cycle of abuse that show more women in her family attract by avoiding Xavier, her abusive ex-boyfriend strengthens her resolve.

The bond of sisterhood holds Esperanza and Dulce strong against the obstacles the controlling men from their past use to attempt to keep them humble. Knowing tomorrow can be better than yesterday, Espe and Dulce work together to escape the shackles of their past.

Don't judge the book by its cover. Picture Me Rolling is more than you expect if you are only looking for only the Bling-Bling drama. You will face the reality around you and see the pot of gold at the end of your rainbow. Black Artemis did an excellent job showing that the rise above adversity is possible. The emotions felt while you're reading will make you hate the fact that the last page came so soon.

Stephanie Wilkerson-Hester, Founder/Reviewer
Literary Essence Views
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Set in the Bronx of the 1980s at the height of hip-hop and b-boys, Smiles and Nike are teenage boys just trying to survive and get by in the 'hood where crime and crackheads are prevalent. There's not a strong plot; the boys deal with family issues, girl trouble, their changing friendship, dodging the local thugs, and finding their places in the world. The b-boy slang flies fast and furious and the dramas of the 'hood are loud and lively--no upper middle-class hand-wringing here. Teens who show more prefer an urban edge to their reading will reach for this. show less

Just remember, when you read this review, It is me writing it, so you take it w/ a grain of salt:

This is a book I wanted to like, I really did.... Sounds like fun four chicas/amigas out on a Road Trip!

I didn't like the women in the book, I didn't like their families, I didn't like their attitudes.... I don't like jealous b.s. games, I don't like the book....

"Tons of Baggage" is the operator here....... Oh my, 4 pretty, single college "chicas"..... Doing their best to live their lives.... One show more has a b.f. whose wife wants him back, one is a Lipstick Lesbian in love w/ one of the gals who happens to be her best friend, one is attempting to heal herself from a traumatic experience via spirituality. They battle their lovers, ex-lovers, mothers, fathers... in middle of their battles, they all get up and go on a road trip to San Francisco, and have to deal w/ each other!

Personally, I just didn't care about these chicas.... So sad, too bad!
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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
7
Members
268
Popularity
#86,165
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
7
ISBNs
28

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