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Never Drank the Kool-Aid: Essays.


* Never Drank the Kool-Aid: Essays by Toure Picador, March 2006 $15, ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
 0-312-42578-3

Whether anybody likes it or not, hip-hop is as American as apple pie. Whether the focus is Lil' Kim's implants or 50 Cent's thuggish newfound wealth or Ying Yang Twins' minstrel idiocy IDIOCY, med. jur. That condition of mind, in which the reflective, or all or a part of the affective powers, are either entirely wanting, or are manifested to the least possible extent.
     2. Idiocy generally depends upon organic defects.
, there is so much more to the music and culture than the surface banality and vulgarity, as Toure knows. In his new collection of pop essays and magazine features, the cultural observer disagrees with the critics who think hip-hop is crude, dull, criminal and hypersexual hy·per·sex·u·al  
adj.
Excessively interested or involved in sexual activity.



hyper·sex
, and positions himself as a fan of the street music as long as "we continue to live in America and suffer the daily assaults of America."

Toure can write about the outsized out·size  
n.
1. An unusual size, especially a very large size.

2. A garment of unusual size.

adj. also out·sized
Unusually large, weighty, or extensive.

Adj. 1.
 paranoia of Biggie big·gie  
n. Slang
1. A very important person: "hassles between executive biggies" New York.

2.
 and DMX See DMX512. , play the dozens with Kanye West about his Jeffrey Hunter-like neckwear, tease about Eminem's Father Knows Best routine with his family and get some licks in on Diddy and Russell Simmons and their lofty ambitions. Sometimes he can be fearless or even reckless. He goes up against the bulldog mogul Suge Knight, a massive man of Death Row Records fame, who supposedly threatens the writer. At other times, he slows the ball down to do straight profiles of Dale Earnhardt Jr., Colin Powell and Jennifer Capriati, as well as a real slice-and-dice essay on Condoleezza Rice.

The author of Soul City (Little, Brown and Company, 2004) and The Portable Promised Land (Little, Brown and Company, 2002), Toure now offers a collection of essays that is serious entertainment--smart, probing and sometimes surprising. Give it a try.

--Reviewed by Robert Fleming
COPYRIGHT 2006 Cox, Matthews & Associates
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Fleming, Robert
Publication:Black Issues Book Review
Article Type:Book review
Date:Jul 1, 2006
Words:266
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