Image for One Day It'll All Make Sense

One Day It'll All Make Sense

See all formats and editions

Common has earned a reputation in the hip hop world as a conscious artist by embracing themes of love and struggle in his songs, and by sharing his own search for knowledge with his listeners. His journey toward understandingexpressed in his music and now in his roles in film and televisionis rooted in his relationship with a remarkable woman, his mother, Mahalia Ann Hines.

In One Day Itll All Make Sense, Common holds nothing back. He tells what it was like for a boy with big dreams growing up on the South Side of Chicago. He reveals how he almost quit rapping after his first album, Can I Borrow a Dollar?, sold only two thousand copies. He recounts his rise to stardom, giving a behind-the-scenes look into the recording studios, concerts, movie sets, and after-parties of a hip-hop celebrity and movie star. He reflects on his controversial invitation to perform at the White House, a story that grabbed international headlines. And he talks about the challenges of balancing fame, love, and fatherhood.

One Day Itll All Make Sense is a gripping memoir, both provocative and funny. Common shares never-before-told stories about his encounters with everyone from Tupac to Biggie, Ice Cube to Lauryn Hill, Barack Obama to Nelson Mandela. Drawing upon his own lyrics for inspiration, he invites the reader to go behind the spotlight to see him as he really isnot just as Common but as Lonnie Rashid Lynn.

Each chapter begins with a letter from Common addressed to an important person in his lifefrom his daughter to his close friend and collaborator Kanye West, from his former love Erykah Badu to you, the reader. Through it all, Common emerges as a man in full. Rapper. Actor. Activist. But also father, son, and friend. Commons story offers a living example of how, no matter what youve gone through, one day itll all make sense.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Atria Books
1451625871 / 9781451625875
Hardback
13/09/2011
320 pages
156 x 235 mm, 612 grams