Book Read Free

The Cook Up

Page 21

by D. Watkins


  For the first time in my life I realized how important reading really was. I harassed the professor for more titles after class. She introduced me to writers like Langston Hughes who ended up being my favorite poet and thinkers like Michael Eric Dyson, who wrote a book about 2Pac—2Pac! I didn’t even know you could write a book about 2Pac! But Sister Souljah’s The Coldest Winter Ever was the book that hooked me on reading. I read it in a day and then read it again. The story hit really close to home, giving me perspectives of drug culture I never thought about while being deep in it. I needed more.

  After reading everything Souljah wrote, I started devouring novels, articles, and everything else. You couldn’t find me without a book. My mind opened all the way up and I filled it with more information and new ideas. I gained a better understanding of music and culture in general. Nas’s stories made more sense, Jay Z complex rhymes became more clear and for the first time in my life, I felt like I was making decisions based on my own thoughts. Critical thinking became my obtainable super power. As a result I began to question everything—why did the government dismantle the Black Panthers but allow the KKK to function? The Black Panthers built while the Klan destroyed. Why does America praise Joe Kennedy and demonize Big Meech? They both made fortunes selling illegal drugs. The government still makes a fortune off of selling drugs. Why were the dudes involved in the Rodney King uprise called rioters but the people responsible for the Boston Tea party got to be revolutionaries? They both looted and destroyed for freedom. Why? I continued to absorb, question, and then question my questions.

  I understood why my friends and I hated reading growing up. As a kid, I was given books about slaves who followed kids that painted fences by Mark Twain—not to take away from those books, but they didn’t speak to us. We spent summers ducking bullets, and riding dirt bikes, so the events that Twain spoke about felt flat to us.

  Bip read and he was different—he was thinker. He analyzed things and that’s what reading has allowed me to do. Now I know why he cared about it so much. Way back, I spit a Douglass quote to my bro that went, “Once you learn to read, you will be forever free.” I didn’t really get it back then, but it is so clear now. Reading has freed me. I’m at home now.

  A few books, along with my new passion for reading, helped all of my perspectives evolve and sent me on the path to purpose and an understanding of the power of education. I wanted to be able to do the same for other students, so I decided to become a teacher.

  As a teacher I thought I could use my story as a way to get other kids like me—Dog Boy, Mac, Nick, and Hurk—to read. Education was working for me so I knew I could use it as tool to help somebody else, plus I could give back to the neighborhoods that my friends and I tore apart. All these college dudes rap about making it out the hood, but that’s not me. Running away from issues don’t solve them. Staying in East Baltimore as a teacher after I graduate could make a huge difference.

  I shared my plan with some of the corny people I went to school with and they said, “Teachers don’t make money!” I ignored them, because I made tons of money in the streets and happiness didn’t come with it. But developing a better understanding of who I am and where I came from meant the world to me and would make my brother proud.

  And making my brother proud was all I wanted to do anyway.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  This book is dedicated to you.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  D. Watkins is a columnist for Salon. His work has been published in the New York Times, The Guardian, Rolling Stone, and other publications. He holds a master’s in Education from Johns Hopkins University and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Baltimore. He is a college professor at the University of Baltimore and founder of the BMORE Writers Project, and has also been the recipient of numerous awards including Ford’s Men of Courage and a BME fellowship. He has lectured at countless universities, and events, and programs around the country.

  Watkins has been featured as a guest and commentator on NBC’s Meet the Press, CNN’s The Erin Burnett Show, MSNBC’s Melissa Harris-Perry Show, Democracy Now, and NPR’s Monday Morning, among other shows.

  Watkins is from and lives in East Baltimore. He is the author of The Beast Side: Living (and Dying) While Black in America.

  ALSO BY D. WATKINS

  The Beast Side: Living (and Dying) While Black in America

  Reading Group Guide

  THE COOK UP

  1. If you were in D’s position and you opened that safe, what do you think you would have done?

  2. At what point does The Cook Up read more like a novel than a memoir? How is D’s story a Hero’s Journey?

  3. How would you characterize D’s choice to start cooking crack cocaine? Was it an act of veneration to try to be just like his big brother? Or by defying Bip’s wish for his brother to attend college, was becoming a drug dealer an assertion of D’s independence? Bip always hoped for more for D: Who in your life does that for you?

  4. D begins The Cook Up with a college acceptance and ends it with a college attendance, but he lived a thousand lives in between. Consider the ways D’s values changed during his years away from higher education in terms of maturity, responsibility, and materialism. What if he had remained at Loyola University and never started dealing? What did he gain from dropping out of college?

  5. Discuss the ways in which the realities of running a drug ring differed from your expectations of it. Were there any stereotypes you may have had that The Cook Up forced you to confront? If so, what were they?

  6. D refers to himself as a “serial escapist.” Does this strike you as an apt characterization? What exactly is D escaping from, and does he ever succeed in outrunning it?

  7. D refers to women like Miss Angie as “the most powerful people in the Black community,” in that she provides consistent support in a neighborhood of volatile change. In what ways does this definition upset the conventional understanding of power? By these standards, who is the most powerful person in your own life?

  8. Why do you think D included Hope in his memoir? As a symbol? A warning? A turning point? Who was she to him? In their final interaction at the 7-Eleven, D and Hope fail to recognize each other. Put yourself in D’s shoes: Would you have acted differently?

  9. D and his friends worshiped Jay Z; they even called their product “Rockafella” to pay homage to the rapper’s record label. What do you think it is about the musician that made him so iconic to this group? Who was that figure in your own life, growing up?

  10. D says that as a child, he was given books such as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn that he and his friends couldn’t relate to. It wasn’t until he discovered Fire in a Canebrake in college that D finally enjoyed reading. What books do you think should be taught in schools? Is there such a thing as a universally relatable book?

  11. Discuss D’s assertion that reading is the avenue to freedom, to understanding others and ourselves. When does reading make us feel closer to worlds other than our own, and when does it make us more aware of our individuality? Is one result more freeing than another? What freedoms has The Cook Up provided you?

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  Contents

  COVER

  TITLE PAGE

  WELCOME

  DEDICATION

  EPIGRAPH

  THE BEAST SIDE OF BALTIMORE

  LOOKING FOR BIP

  MY BROTHER’S KEEPER

  AFTERMATH

  SHOOTERS

  COPING TACTICS

  A DIFFERENT WORLD

  THAT RED SAFE

  MY TRUST FUND

  HOPE

  COOK UP

  ROCKAFELLA

  PROTECTOR

  ASHLAND AND MADEIRA

  MY
BLOCK

  A DRUG CREW

  TONE, DOG BOY, AND US

  CASHLAND AND MADEIRA

  IKE GUY

  THE BEAST

  COMING TO AMERICA

  VIRGIN GANGSTERS

  MY FIRST BENZ

  REX RULES

  DINNER AT ANGIE’S

  KNOCK ’EM DOWNS

  STEEL SHARPENS STEEL

  SWEET SONI

  LITTLE DEBBIES AND AUTOMATIC WEAPONS

  DOG STORE

  DATE ANXIETY

  DINNER FOR REAL

  WHAT THE FUCK IS RENAL DIALYSIS

  THE GREEN HOUSE

  SMACK LESSONS FOR TROY

  SHOOTOUTS

  IN A TIME OF WAR

  BYE, DEE

  MY RELIGION

  SOME NEW SHIT WILL FIX IT

  4.0?

  SHOULD’VE

  OLD HEAD SAID

  STRAIGHT TO VOICE MAIL

  MURDER TEAM

  HOT BOY TROY

  NICK GOT THE BLOCK

  MADEIRA STREET

  TYLER REUNION

  DEE VERSUS TYLER

  TYLER’S BLOCK

  BIRTHDAY BRAWL

  THE OTHER BALTIMORE

  1046 WEST LOMBARD

  NO DOC ZONE

  MURDERLAND

  CODED

  THE NEW OWNER

  HEALTH CARE

  240 WILSON STREET

  THE SIGNS

  THE BUSINESS PLAN

  COP UP

  BOLTON BUBBLE

  REMEMBER UNCLE GEE

  I’M IN THE NBA

  I DON’T WANNA BE IN THE NBA ANYMORE

  NICK

  REBIRTH

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ALSO BY D. WATKINS

  READING GROUP GUIDE

  THE COOK UP

  NEWSLETTERS

  COPYRIGHT

  Copyright

  Some names, relationships, and locations were changed to protect the innocent and the guilty.

  Copyright © 2016 by Dwight Watkins

  Cover copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Reading Group Guide copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Cover design by Post Typography

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

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  First ebook edition: May 2016

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  ISBN 978-1-4555-8864-0

  E3–20160321–JV–PC

 

 

 


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