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14+ Works 305 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Gucci Mane (Radric Delantic Davis) is an American rapper who pioneered trap music, a subgenre of hiphop, through his music label, 1017 Records. He is no stranger to controversy, releasing music to coincide with court appearances and even arranging for collaborations from prison. While serving time, show more he began working on his gritty and personal memoirs, which have been praised as an instant hit, much like the music he creates. Gucci Mane is married and has a 10 year old son (information released in his autobiohraphy). show less

Includes the name: Gucci Mane,

Works by Gucci Mane

Associated Works

Rare (2020) — Contributor, some editions — 11 copies

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Common Knowledge

Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

7 reviews
BRRR!

I tore this up. Laughed frequently. Gucci was one of my most listened to artists last year, but I’ve always been a fairly passive fan. This book is great for anyone who wants to know what Gucci Mane is all about and how he became a GOAT. If you’re super familiar, this book might be surface level knowledge for you. But for anyone who knows nothing or very little about the artist, this is an easy, quick, and fascinating read.
Gucci hit it out of the park with this one. Along with the braggadocio Gucci brings us his meaningful code of honor, his acceptance of responsibility for his actions, a sensitivity to the needs and motivations of others, an occasional dash of humility, some surprising olive branches, and even more surprising a willingness to be vulnerable. There is a story arc here, we see his growth, his lessons learned. It is downright inspiring. It is also really funny. Gucci has some stories, and not all show more of them are set at Magic City (though some are.)

Musically my ATL rap (and trap) tastes run more Zone 4 than 6 (or 3, where Gucci's discoveries seem to hale from), so I did not have an interest in this book. But then Roxanne Gay gave it an effusive 5-star review, and I thought "sure, why not." Thanks Roxanne! I lived in Atlanta for 16 years, and I tried to know my city and its stories, but Gucci told me an Atlanta story that surprised me in many ways, and one I didn't know I wanted to hear.

I listened to the audio and recommend it, One nit to pick: the reader (who was otherwise excellent) was clearly not from the 404 and could not pronounce DeKalb correctly (or as we pronounce in Atlanta). Given how frequently Gucci found himself in DeKalb County lockup or tangling with county law enforcement this was a significant irritant.
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I just want to start off by admitting how much I dislike Gucci Mane. He spews about his hate of unrelateable music yet ends up doing the same thing. Bleh. I’m only referring to the songs where you can just tell he really thinks he’s the greatest thing ever...like I need to listen to that. But of course, since I’m not black and I didn’t grow up in the same circumstances he did I can’t say anything about the songs where he relates that part of his life. Those are somewhat interesting show more but it’s not like I can vibe with them.

But I thought this was a well-written autobiography. I wouldn’t expect anything less from the man that has maybe too many songs. It’s funny how at one point I thought he was sharing the wrong sort of details when he should have been focusing on other things but it’s also kind of how I felt about some songs. Sometimes I think he just releases things so that he’s still on the public’s minds but the songs are just mediocre. I liked his sense of humor but that cockiness that flows out of him was written all over this book. Though that is also the main reason why I liked this so much, it just sounded like Gucci Mane wrote this book. No one else could butter up this guy more than the man himself. If you want to get to know him, this book is the perfect start.

Oh and then after finishing it make a playlist of all the songs he mentioned and relive the reading experience but through his biggest hits/favorite tracks. That was quite a trip.
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Didn’t realize Gucci Mane has had a such huge impact on the world of music. Good insight into the 2000-2010s east coast rap era and how the justice system looks from a rapper’s perspective. At first, I didn’t really buy the BS ending where he claimed his last stint in prison really would change him, but if you look at where he’s at now, he’s really stuck to his commitments. Pretty inspiring, and I hope he keeps it up :)

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Works
14
Also by
1
Members
305
Popularity
#77,180
Rating
3.9
Reviews
7
ISBNs
29
Languages
2

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