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31 Reviews
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Eight is enough is more like it!,
By rod row "row" (southaven,ms) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
I would first like to start by saying, "What Happened." I loved all three of Noire's other books however this book was a total blur. It had a decent plot, no rising action, a predictable climax, and a twisted ending. It would have been wise to concentrate on one or two characters. However, this books was maybe 300 pages but had like 20 different characters. Prince is the only artist that I know who has the ability to drop new material every three monthes. Word to the wise Noire, "All money ain't good money." In other words, putting 50 Cent's name on a book doesn't mean anything to an intellect. 50 cent can afford to flop he's rich, however you are not established yet.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not the best book I've ever read, but fast-paced and entertaining,
By
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Baby Brother is the story of the Davis brothers, seven boys from New York who have all had their run-ins with the law with the exception of the youngest--Baby Brother. Since the boys' parents died when they were young, they made a promise to their mother that they would take care of Baby Brother and teach him right from wrong. Baby Brother, also known as Zabu, has taken their lessons to heart and made something of himself. He's leaving for California in two days with a full scholarship to Stanford and has plans to become a surgeon.
The book begins with Zabu struggling to say goodbye to his girlfriend Sari, a half-Puerto Rican half-black girl who he's been with for the past three years. Zabu knows it's going to be hard to leave Sari, but believes that going to Stanford and making a life for himself outside his brothers' world of drugs and corruption will give them a chance at a real future together. Sadly, on their last night together Sari is brutally gunned down in the streets of New York and Zabu is nailed for the crime. When an unsympathetic judge refuses to hear his brothers' pleas about Zabu's bright future, and instead sends Baby Brother to Rikers, the rest of the Davis boys band together to get their little brother out of jail and to find the real culprits behind Sari's murder. Baby Brother was less than two hundred pages and was pretty quick-paced and exciting. The Davis Brothers have long been on the wrong side of the law, but when the only innocent one among them is punished for a crime he didn't commit, they use their street connections and hard backgrounds to figure out a way to get him out of this mess. It wasn't the most well-planned and executed book I've ever read, but it was entertaining and easy to read so I was able to look past the excessive sex scenes, needless descriptive acts of violence, and street slang I couldn't understand to see the heart of this story. If you've seen the movie Four Brothers, you more or less know what the plot and outcome of this book will be, and since I liked that movie, it made it a whole lot easier to like this novella.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Promises, Promises,
By
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
In Baby Brother by 50 Cent and Noire, Antwan "Priest", Malik, Raheem, Kadir, Farad, and Finesse make up six of the seven Davis brother clan, who are on a mission to protect the youngest, Zabu a.k.a Baby Brother. This was a promise made to their mother on her death bed.
Each brother chose a different path of life to travel. The eldest brother, Priest, was formerly ` Monster', a downright gritty thug who pimped, killed, gang banged, and hustled until a prison bid set him on the path to being spiritually saved. Malik was one of NYPD's finest, attempting to manage a life of upholding the law whilst being enmeshed with his law-breaking twin brothers, Farad and Finesse. The twins were drug lords who terrorized the streets of New York ruthlessly. Kadir followed in his father's footsteps and took to the game of gambling. Farad was a correction's officer at Riker's Island trying to stay on the straight and narrow with his nine to five. Baby Brother, the pride and joy of the family, was their hope for a better future. He obtained a scholarship to attend Stanford University, had never been in trouble with the law and the brothers made sure to protect him from the lessons the streets had taught them so harshly. The novella starts with Baby Brother having a little fun with his Puerto Rican girlfriend, Sari. The two wanted to enjoy each other because it would be two days before Baby Brother would board the airplane for California to attend Stanford. Winding down their day, Sari was getting into Baby Brother's car when she was shot. Attempting to capture the shooter, Baby Brother picked up the gun that was dropped by the assailant and took chase but was met by headlights and gun barrels as the cops caught him. Baby Brother understood that under the circumstances, he was the perpetrator of the murder. The other Davis brothers found out about Baby Brother and attempted to get their brother out of jail, to no avail. That is when the plot thickened. Baby Brother was alone in prison; a world unknown to him. Would his brothers succeed in using their inside connections to protect him until he hits the bricks again? Or would he become a victim of his brothers past crimes? Would their mother rest peacefully for a promise protected or would she turn over in her grave? 50 Cent and Noire leave none of these questions unanswered. Baby Brother was a quick, intense read. Though it started out slow, once you delve into the pages you quickly understand the plot and begin to care for the brothers and their struggles. It was tough for me to stay connected with each character because there were so many. The slang used was also a barrier because it did not cross territories. Most of the words are probably used in New York and understood by New Yorkers, so someone not from that area may be slightly confused as to their meaning. I am recommending this novella to readers who have short attention spans and who are unconcerned about not being able to visualize the setting. It does possess a strong plot and adds a `family' story to urban literature which is not the norm. I also recommend that 50 Cent and Noire expand this novella into a novel to give the story the added depth it needs. Reviewed by Darnetta Frazier APOOO BookClub
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not Impressed!,
By MUA&epicbooklover "Angel" (fromChiTown in NWI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Ok, I understand that this is a NOVELLA and not a NOVEL and Novella's are shorter than novels but, Garbage is Garbage no matter what size bag its in! I'am a Noire fan really I'am, I've read everything else she has written and loved it all! But this Noire and 50 collabo? Oh Hell Nall! I don't know if it's because of 50 influence but I din't care for this book at all! If this is how G Unit books will be I'll pass great authors or not I Want My Money Back Damnit! Noire, I'm looking foward to "Thong on Fire" and all the author books from you but please leave G Unit books alone! PLEASE!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Baby Brother,
By Author "Poet123" (Stafford, VA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
It was truly not one of her best books. G-Spot was the best and Candy Licker was just a carbon copy. But I know she got skills so keep doing your thing
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
WTF?????,
By Ms LeDiva "Diva loves drama!" (Dallas, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Okay...I get this is a novella and not a full length novel, but there was a lot of telling and not doing in this book. Mainly, it was just one big narrative. I've read three of Noire's books G-spot being the best since the other two were basically G-spot again just different characters. I bought this book when it first came out with another of her books which i believe was the third one from her at the time. When i finished reading that book and saw i just bought and read the same book 3 times there was no way i was getting trapped into reading baby brother. well here it is a couple years later and i've run out of stuff to read so what do i do, pick up baby brother and for what?
I really hate how Priest let the devil have him by making the monster come back out. It was a stupid turn about for him and so elementary and predictable were not only his actions, but the entire book. It was like saying God doesn't exist. Why would brutally kill 2 old people who had nothing to do with his brother's death. Didn't he know that God said 'vengenace shall be mine'? The book had it's entertaining parts which is the only reason i gave three and not the two stars i wanted to. I don't know what to say other than WTF???
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Baby Brother,
By Literary Marie (Detroit, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Read "Baby Brother" if you enjoy quick and straight to the point plots. Its filled with suspense and action packed.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's Fiddy and Noire,
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Baby Brother by 50 Cent and Noire is an extraordinary realistic portrayal of broken dreams, family loyalty, and redemption. Noire manages to give a full, complete, and compelling story with her launch novella on G-Unit books and if you're a first time Noire reader, you're in for a treat. If you've read any of her other novels, you're already familiar with the type of fire that only she can bring. The Davis brothers represents all aspects of urban male life: your typical playa's in the game, an old school hustler now on the path of the straight and narrow, the brothers out there trying to hold the streets down through official law enforcement, the brother who struggles with addiction, and then there's Baby Brother, Zabu Davis. Who is the physical essence of his older brother's hopes and dreams. In keeping with a promise made to their mother before she died, the brothers do all they can to save Zabu from the traps that lie await for our men in most urban neighborhoods. It's an open love letter to all the brothers out there trying to carve their piece of mind. Noire works her magical pen and does what she does best jumping off in '07 with a bang. She tells a hott to death story with characters that are bound to draw you in. I read the story in a few hours and couldn't put the book down. It's a definite page turner and without question worth the price of admission. You won't be disappointed. Trust.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Staying 1 Step ahead!!,
By
This review is from: Baby Brother (Paperback)
Ok I havent even read this book yet and I am sort of afraid to spend my money and be left dissappointed. Mainly because I've read Death before Dishoner by 50 and Nikki Turner and that one was awful plus the reviews on this book is so bad as well. 50 need to find something else to do because if he keeps this up he is going ruin alot of talented authors careers!!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Read,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Baby Brother (Kindle Edition)
I would definitely recommend this book. It actually give an insight of how you can live a life of violence then turn it around in a positive way while still having the love of your loved ones. It shows how no matter the different paths one may take the strong family bond you made form is never broken. The Davis brothers showed that in this book that no matter what they would try to honor their promise to their mother no matter the circumstances. Noire keep up the good work :))
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Baby Brother by 50 Cent (Paperback - January 9, 2007)
$13.00 $10.98
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