From Publishers Weekly
Philadelphia politics and drugs complicate the fate of two star-crossed lovers in Jones's gripping new novel. Twenty-three-year-old Karima "Cream" Thomas is just out of prison, having served six months for taking the fall for Duane Faison, a notorious North Philly drug dealer who charmed Cream away from her safe life as a member of one of the city's influential political families. After hooking up with Duane again to say goodbye, she lands a job with Mayor Jeffrey Tatum's office through the connections of her aunt, Marilyn Johnson, who's president of the city council and Jeffrey's (married) lover. Marilyn decides to use Cream's past to manipulate the upcoming elections to her benefit, but things quickly escalate out of control after Duane's crew go on a killing spree. Jones (Ride or Die) deftly describes Philly's mean streets, the slippery slopes of City Hall and the rocky cliffs of Cream's redemption.
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Review
Praise for Solomon Jones
Ride or Die
“Like Jones’s previous novels, Ride or Die finds heart and soul in bleak surroundings.”
—Philadelphia Weekly
“Solomon Jones is the real deal. With page-turning plots and lifelike characters, he takes you beyond the ink and deep into the story.”
—K’wan, bestselling author of Street Dreams, Hoodlum, and Eve
“In Pipe Dream and The Bridge, Solomon Jones proved himself a vivid storyteller and an adept craftsman. In his latest effort, the adrenaline-fueled Ride or Die, he infuses the action with enough pathos and heart to set a new standard. This is a fast-paced, beautifully compelling love story rendered against the gritty, urban backdrop of the best noir.”
—Nichelle D. Tramble, author of The Last King and The Dying Ground
“Ride or Die is a scorching roller-coaster ride through the intestines of Philly. Solomon Jones masterfully constructs a world where no one is what they seem.”
—Y. Blak Moore, author of The Apostles
The Bridge
“Jones tells his tale with confidence and a staccato style that heightens the melodrama. And in Kenya, he creates a character who remains vivid when she’s off the page. . . . The Bridge never fails to engage us.”
—The Boston Globe
“Jones, whose first book, Pipe Dream, was hailed as a promising debut, shows more of that promise in The Bridge. . . . A powerful, painful look at and inside the world of heroin.”
—Philadelphia Inquirer
“Passionately unsparing as before in its portrayal of a subculture in despair.”
—Kirkus Reviews
Pipe Dream
“In his first novel, Solomon Jones shows that for a black piper in Philadelphia, not getting killed by the cops can be harder to pull off than not getting killed by crack.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Gripping tale of dope, murder and self-worth . . . a narrative style that’s reminiscent of Donald Goines.”
—The Source
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.