- Anthony Whyte
Anthony Whyte is an African American writer of
Hip hop Literature who began his writing career while still working for The New York City Administration for Children’s Services [http://www.nyc.gov/html/acs/html/home/home.shtml] . He began writing seriously when he became a member of The Tuesday Night Writers’ Workshop ran byProfessor Sue Shapiro of the NYU School ofContinuing Education [http://www.scps.nyu.edu/] , and within a year his first novel was published. Whyte grew up inBronx but also traveled and lived world-wide while serving in theU.S. Armed Forces . Today, Whyte lives and writes in New York City.Whyte's writings are based on characters of hip hop culture. His first
novel , published under the original title, "Ghetto Falsehoods" was published by "!st Books Library" in 2001. Shortly after publishing, Whyte discovered that his marketing vision was very different from his publishers and decided to strike out on his own. As a result, he founded Augustus Publishing [http://www.augustuspublishing.com/] with Jason Claiborne President of the company.Whyte republished "Ghetto Falshoods" and it became "Ghetto Girls" in 2002 [http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?z=y&EAN=9780975945315&itm=1] and it quickly landed on the
Essence Magazine Best Seller List. His "Ghetto Girls Series" tells the tale of four young women attending NYC high schools who are talented singers and dancers. Two of the girls originate from upper parts of society and one is from the hood. The fourth girl has an uncle who is a clone of aSean Combs (P. Diddy). Since then, Whyte also published "Ghetto Girls Too" and .Whyte credits writers including
Chester Himes ,Iceberg Slim andShakespeare for influences. Hip hop literature, formerly known asStreet lit , is a form of writing that focuses on grittiness of city living. The style of hip hop literature is spreading and now there are many novels on the market written by young black authors. While some had their beginnings in prison, not all authors or publishers focus on prison writers.Whyte is unique as an author in that he is not only devoted to publishing his own work, but also the promotion and publication of works by new and emerging writers in the hip hop genre. He often takes on the task of editing the work himself and uses professional readers and other editors to assist in the process. He calls members of this team, "The Augustus Dream Team". Whyte is now branching out with other stories that to reach a wider audience.
Some newly published works from "Augustus Publishing" (Where Hip Hop literature begins) include: "It Can Happen In A Minute" by S.M. Johnson, "Booty Call *69" by Erick S. Gray," The Blue Circle" by Keisha Seignious, "If it Ain't One Thing It's Another" by Sharron Doyle, "A Good Day to Die" by James Hendricks, "Woman's Cry" by Vanessa Martir, and "Lipstick Diaries", an all-female
anthology of ten emerging writers with a foreword by Crystal Lacey Winslow from "Melodrama Publishing [http://melodramapublishing.com/"] .References
Augustus Publishing [http://www.augustuspublishing.com/]
"Ghetto Girls Soo Hood" 2006 [http://www.amazon.com/s?initialSearch=1&url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=ghetto+girls+soo+hood]
"Ghetto Girls" 2002 [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0972277129]
"Ghetto Girls Too" 2004 [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0975945300]
"Streets of New York, Vol. 1" [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0975306618]
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