Kennedy Ryan shares a special post on the inspiration behind “Bruise,” the original piece written for her latest release Grip.
(Scroll to the end for the full poem & a signed paperbackĀ giveaway.)
āAm I all of your fears, wrapped in black skin?ā
The cursor flashed a warning at the end of the line Iād just typed. Read on its own, the words seared the page, an incendiary challenge. A jagged line in the sand that could shove half my readers to one side, and half to the other. I needed to be careful. I wanted to be fearless. I had to be honest.
The hero of Grip, my latest release, Marlon James (Grip to his fans), is a rising hip-hop star, but heās more than that. Heās a lyricist and a poet. Heās a black man, concerned about black men vulnerableĀ toĀ cops who should be protecting them. He admires officers who run toward danger when most of us run away.
He wonders what he can do to bridge the gap between the two.
I took several risks writing Grip, confronting, in the context of a love story, Ā prejudices that are often blatant, but sometimes remain hidden even from ourselves. No issue weighed heavier on my mind than that of black v. blue. In the story, Grip gets stopped DWB. Driving While Black, for those unfamiliar. Probably somewhere else in mainstream romance, readers have sat behind the wheel in a black heroās perspective, glanced in the rearview mirror, seen those blue lights flashing, and wrestled with the fear, frustration and anger born from years of being stopped for no reason…but I havenāt read it. And as I wrote it, I remembered my own husbandās accounts of being stopped most of his life; of him and his friends lying on their stomachs on the ground while their cars were searched. I recalled the first-hand accounts Iād read of black and Hispanic men, even in the last few months in LA, Gripās hometown, stopped and searched so much more than their counterparts. But I also thought of my friendās husband, a good cop, a good man who faced down fear every day to protect people like me. Of her anxiety when tragedy strikes, when travesties happen. Incidents that I watch on television from the safety of my couch while her husband wades knee-deep into danger.
I wanted to tell both sides of this story. I didnāt want to debate or persuade. I wanted readers to listen; to hear the other perspective. To consider. To understand. To empathize. These are the building blocks of resolution. Our country is more divided than weāve been in a long time, and many of those divisions still, sadly still, fall along the lines of race. I donāt know how we resolve anything in this current climate. I donāt think we do unless we exchange perspectives; manage to communicate with one another in lower decibels, in reasonable thoughts, in something besides shouty caps on Facebook and Twitter.
In Flow, the prequel to Grip, Bristol, the heroine says, ā...before we say our words, theyāre ammunition. After weāve said them, theyāre smoking bullets. There seems to be no middle ground and too little common ground for dialogue to be productive. We just tiptoe around things, afraid weāll offend or look ignorant, be misunderstood. Honesty is a risk few are willing to take.ā
And yet it Ā requires honesty, and giving each other grace to speak with candor and respect, even if sometimes ineloquently. It requires that we step into the otherās shoes. Usually, we are not all right or all wrong. We are more nuanced than that; the issues more complex than black and white.
Or in this case, black and blue.
This story models that, I hope. In my small corner of the world, with the only tools at my disposal, my pen and my voice, I hope I demonstrated that. I hope someone on one side of that jagged line in the sand understood the person across from them a little better after reading GRIP. This wasnāt about my personal outrage; my indignation as I watched black men gunned down this summer during traffic stops. It wasnāt about my horrified grief as I watched cops in Dallas ambushed, killed. It wasnāt just about either, and it was completely about both. One of my favorite communicators says sometimes we choose between making a point and making a difference. I really hope, in some small way, the words to āBruise,ā the original piece I co-wrote with a spoken word artist for this book, volley right past just making a point, and manage to make a small difference, even if the only difference is that one person chooses to listen and tries to understand. There are so many other things I could say; so many statistics I could cite to sway you to one side or the other. But instead, Iāll let āBruiseā speak for itself.
And for those on both sides of that jagged line in the sand.
For more on the role of race in Grip, check out Mara White’sĀ piece in The Huffington Post.Ā http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/58b96fd5e4b0fa65b844b200
Signed paperbacks of GRIP & FLOW, the prequel, are up for grabs on Kennedy’s Facebook page!
ENTER HERE:Ā
https://www.facebook.com/KennedyRyanAuthor/photos/a.502447269864442.1073741828.438681796240990/1186068878168941/?type=3&theater
āBRUISEā
Copyright (c) Kennedy Ryan, 2017
Am I all of your fears, wrapped in black skin,
Driving something foreign, windows with black tint
Handcuffed on the side of the road, second home for black men
Like we donāt have a home that we trying to get back to when
PoPo pulls me over with no infractions,
Under the speed limit, seat belt even fastened,
Turned on Rosecrans when two cruisers collapsed in
Barking orders, yeah, this that Cali harassment
Guns drawn, neighbors looking from front lawns and windows
I know cops got it hard, donāt wanna make a wife a widow
But they act like I aināt paying taxes, like your boy aināt a citizen
They think Iām riding filthy, like Iām guilty pleading innocence.
They say it’s āProtect & Serveā, but check my word
Sunny skies, ghetto birds overhead stress your nerves,
They say if you aināt doinā wrong, you got nothinā to fear,
But the people sayinā that, they canāt be livinā here . . .
We all BRUISE,
Itās that black and blue
A dream deferred,
Nightmare come true
In another manās shoes,
Walk a mile or two
Might learn a couple things
Iām no different than you!
Ā
You call for the good guys when you meet the bad men,
Iām wearing a blue shield and I still feel the reactions
When I patrol the block, I can sense dissatisfaction
Thereās distrust, resentment in every interaction,
Whether the beat cop, lieutenant, sergeant or the captain
We roll our sleeves up and we dig our hands in
I joined the force in order to make a difference,
Swore to uphold the law, protect men, women and children,
These life and death situations, we make split-second decisions
All for low pay, budget cutbacks and restrictions
Weāre ambushed in Dallas, now whereās all the chatter
Gunned down in Baton Rouge, donāt blue lives need to matter?
Not just a jobāit’s a calling, a vocation,
My wifeās up late pacinā, for my safetyāsheās praying,
And yet you call me racist? You wanna trap me with your phone?
Iām just a man with a badge trying my best to make it home.
We all BRUISE,
Itās that black and blue
A dream deferred,
Nightmare come true
In another manās shoes,
Walk a mile or two
Might learn a couple things
Iām no different than you!
Buy GRIP
Amazon US: http://amzn.to/2lKfZVt
Amazon Universal: myBook.to/GetAGrip
Free in KU!
Join the Discussion Group once youāre done: http://bit.ly/2m8xEqf
Check out the TEESPRING Campaign: https://teespring.com/GetGripped
Listen toĀ the playlist on iTunes: http://apple.co/2lWI9ur
Listen toĀ the playlist on Spotify: http://bit.ly/2lWrHdS
“The story reads like a movie . . powerful and intoxicating … and sinfully sexy. GRIP has everythingādynamic characters, soulful plot, and a lesson at the end that will change the way you look at life. One of my favorite reads this year. Maybe ever. 5 massive, gripping stars from me!” Ā — Adriana Lock, USA Today Bestselling Author
About GRIP:
Resisting an irresistible force wears you down and turns you out.
I know.
Iāve been doing it for years.
I may not have a musical gift of my own, but Iāve got a nose for talent and an eye for the extraordinary.
And Marlon James ā Grip to his fans ā is nothing short of extraordinary.
Years ago, we strung together a few magical nights, but I keep those memories in a locked drawer and Iāve thrown away the key.
All thatās left is friendship and work.
Heās on the verge of unimaginable fame, all his dreams poised to come true.
I manage his career, but I canāt seem to manage my heart.
Itās wild, reckless, disobedient.
And it remembers all the things I want to forget.
Download Flow, the prequel to GRIP, TOTALLY FREE!
Amazon: http://amzn.to/2lAhSSC
Read on WATTPAD: http://w.tt/2kUo8Yk
About FLOW:
In 8 years, Marlon James will be one of the brightest rising stars in the music industry.
Bristol Gray will be his tough, no-nonsense manager.
But when they first meet, sheās a college student finding her way in the world,
and heās an artist determined to make his way in it.
From completely different worlds,
all the things that should separate them only draw them closer.
Itās a beautiful beginning, but where will the story end?
FLOW is the prequel chronicling the week of magical days and nights that will haunt Grip & Bristol for years to come.
Add STILL (Grip #2) to your TBR: Ā https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34642932-still
About the Author:
Kennedy loves to write about herself in third person. She loves Diet Cokeā¦though sheās always trying to quit. She adores her husbandā¦who sheāll never quit. She loves her son, who is the most special boy on the planet. And sheās devoted to supporting and serving families living with Autism.
And she writes love stories!
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