Some urban lit authors see fiction in the Oscar-nominated 'American Fiction'

Cord Jefferson, director of the film "American Fiction," poses at the 76th DGA Awards at the Beverly Hilton, Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Omar Tyree, author of such urban lit narratives as 鈥淔lyy Girl鈥 and 鈥淭he Last Street Novel," recently went to see the Oscar-nominated movie 鈥淎merican Fiction.鈥

鈥淚 loved the emotions of the family,鈥 Tyree said of the comic drama starring as the struggling author-academic Thelonious 鈥淢onk鈥 Ellison, Leslie Uggams as his ailing mother and supporting actor nominee Sterling K. Brown as his troubled and unpredictable brother. 鈥淚 love seeing how Monk tries to bring the family unit together and just seeing Black people trying to work things out.鈥

But when asked about the film's featured storyline 鈥 Monk finds unexpected success when he publishes a crude novel under the assumed identity of ex-con Stagg R. Leigh 鈥 Tyree laughed and gave a nod to 鈥渃reative license.鈥

鈥淭he whole idea that he's going to sell a lot of books by keeping it raw, in real life it doesn't work like that,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat kind of book would have been stronger in the early 2000s.鈥

鈥淎merican Fiction,鈥 and in four other categories, was a 2001 novel that came out when a genre alternately called 鈥渦rban lit,鈥 "urban fiction," 鈥渟treet lit鈥 or 鈥渉ip-hop fiction鈥 was peaking, especially among young Black readers. Novels like Sister Souljah鈥檚 鈥淭he Coldest Winter Ever,鈥 Shannon Holmes鈥 鈥淏-More Careful鈥 and Teri Woods鈥 鈥淭rue to the Game鈥 were selling hundreds of thousands of copies while major publishers, who had initially ignored the genre, were offering large advances in search of the next hit.

The urban lit genre dates back at least to 1967, and the release of the memoir 鈥淧imp,鈥 written by Robert Maupin, who was in jail when he began writing under the name Iceberg Slim and built a large word-of-mouth following. He inspired another street lit pioneer, Donald Goines, author of the Kenyatta urban crime series and other works from the 1970s that influenced as who would famously declare, 鈥淢achiavelli was my tutor, Donald Goines my father figure.鈥

Urban lit is still around, but no new releases approach the heights of 20 years ago. According to Circana, which tracks around 85% of the print retail market, the genre sold around 380,000 copies in 2023, far less than the total sales for 鈥淭he Coldest Winter Ever.鈥 Many leading urban lit authors these days are either independently published 鈥 among them Black Lavish and Mz. Lady P 鈥 or released through Kensington Publishing Corp., which still has cut back over the past decade.

"At one point, the majority of the books on our list that were written by Black authors would have been categorized as urban or street lit," says Vida Engstrand, Kensington's director of communications. Because of changes in the 鈥渞etail landscape and reader interest,鈥 Kensington now offers a much broader selection, with 鈥渧ery few front list titles that fall squarely in the category of urban lit," she says.

Everett, whose novels include 鈥淭he Trees鈥 and the upcoming 鈥淛ames,鈥 was unavailable for comment, his publisher said.

Monk is inspired to write his pseudonymous book after looking through a bestseller titled 鈥淲e鈥檚 Lives In Da Ghetto鈥 and reading such sentences as 鈥淢omma says I be the 鈥檚ponsible one and tell me that I gots to hold thing togever while she at work clean dem white people鈥檚 house.鈥 After failing to catch on as a literary author, he is offered a six-figure book deal and seven-figure movie deal for his profanely titled novel.

Stagg R. Leigh is praised by critics and even wins a prestigious literary prize. But few were calling Teri Woods or Shannon Holmes likely Pulitzer winners. The publishing community debated whether urban lit should be condemned for reinforcing stereotypes about Black life 鈥 stereotypes parodied by Everett in his novel 鈥 or welcomed for its blunt portraits of crime and poverty and for attracting new audiences.

鈥淚've heard a lot of people within the Black community who have that viewpoint, that urban lit doesn't reflect all of us,鈥 says author Porscha Sterling. 鈥淎nd while it's important to show the Black community in multiple ways, I do think it's important to have a well-rounded view that includes everyone.鈥

鈥淚n my opinion, it was wrong to characterize these books as different from other Black literature,鈥 says Malaika Adero, an author, agent and executive editor led by 鈥淲e鈥檝e had all kinds of classic books that dealt with the underground economy and the ghetto and weren鈥檛 classified as hip-hop lit.鈥

Monk's novel has some parallels to a bestseller from the 1990s, Sapphire's 鈥淧ush,鈥 an acclaimed and controversial novel about a pregnant teen from Harlem that begins in broken English, but becomes more traditional as the girl learns to read and write. At the time, Sapphire (a pen name for Ramona Lofton) was a little-known poet who received a large advance and attracted the interest of Hollywood. The book became the Oscar-winning movie 鈥淧recious.鈥

鈥淎merican Fiction鈥 director Cord Jefferson, nominated for best adapted screenplay, has said that reading 鈥淓rasure鈥 reminded him of conversations he had with friends over the years.

"Why are we always writing about misery and trauma and violence and pain inflicted on Blacks? Why is this what people expect from us? Why is this the only thing we have to offer to culture?鈥 Jefferson often wondered, he

One urban lit author, Saundra, said she found 鈥淎merican Fiction鈥 funny, but 鈥渁 tad bit overdramatized,鈥 adding she doubted a novel like the one Monk wrote would be so welcomed now. Sterling, whose novels include the series 鈥淕angland鈥 and 鈥淏ad Boys Do It Better,鈥 said she identified with Monk's frustration at not being understood and recognized, but also said the satire in 鈥淎merican Fiction鈥 left her feeling 鈥渕isunderstood"

鈥淚 don't know any people who write like that in the urban lit genre,鈥 she said.

Author K'Wan Foye, known as K'Wan, says he related well to the movie, even if it was 鈥減oking fun鈥 at urban lit. He remembers being encouraged 20 years ago to write 鈥渟omething really ghetto," what became his popular 鈥淗ood Rat鈥 series, and showing up for a meeting at St. Martin's Press wearing a suit.

鈥淭hey thought it was some kind of persona, the way Stagg R. Leigh is in the movie,鈥 K'Wan said. 鈥淎nd I was like, 鈥楴o, this is who I am.鈥欌

If 鈥淓rasure鈥 had been published now, the protagonist would likely have chosen a different kind of book to parody the commercial market, authors and publishers say. Tyree thinks he would have been writing nonfiction, maybe working on a celebrity confessional like Shawanda Williams, who oversees the Black Odyssey imprint of Kensington, cites the 2022 bestseller 鈥淭he Other Black Girl,鈥 the surreal tale of a Black editorial assistant at a publishing house.

Saundra, whose novels include 鈥淗ustler's Queen鈥 and 鈥淚t Ain't About the Revenge,鈥 says the urban lit market has faded enough that she's trying a different kind of book. In 2025, Kensington will publish 鈥淭he Treacherous Wife," which she calls 鈥渄omestic suspense."

鈥淭imes are changing,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I think readers are looking for suspense, something everyone can relate to."

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