Pamela Samuels Young
March 24, 2011
Murder on the Down Low opens at the funeral of Maya Washington. Mourning are her close knit girlfriends. Maya died of AIDS infected by her down low fiancé, Eugene Nelson. Her cousin Special Moore full of vengeful grief makes a scene vowing to make Eugene pay. Among this circle of girlfriends are two attorneys and a detective each with their own work place challenges. Special with the group’s help persuades Maya’s mother to bring a wrongful death action against Eugene. Meanwhile a serial killer is targeting down low professional African American men. Special in her uncontrollable grief mounts a campaign of harassment stalking Eugene. The wrongful death suit takes a turn for the worst when Special is charged as the suspected serial killer against a mountain of circumstantial evidence. Attorney Vernetta Henderson takes the lead as the girlfriends set out to prove Special’s innocence.
Anyone who enjoys the company of sophisticated ladies will love Vernetta Henderson and her crowd. Pamela Samuels Young sketches various recognizable female personalities and their friendships while painting a faithful portrayal of the men who love them. The author has mastered the fictional technique of raising the stakes with unexpected plot twist and turns. In this moral story of tolerance and understanding a seemingly unrelated series of events keeps the reader wondering on the edge of their seat while the author mixes up a mystery package tying it all together in a neat little bow like denouement.
Young self-published her first novel Every Reasonable Doubt establishing her own imprint. She told me she self-published her first novel hoping to be picked up by a major publishing house. Three block buster Essence Best Sellers later, that is no longer of interest. Who needs the powerhouse publisher or agent? Certainly not this author, Pamela Samuels Young is proving to be a self-publishing force.
Editors, publishers, and agents, the industry shakers and movers, the gate keepers sometime get it wrong ignoring certain talent and marketability as often the case with African American fiction writers who resort to self-publishing. We saw it with Omar Tyree, E. Lynn Harris, Mary Morrison and others time and again. Young is the latest in a long line of African American writers going against established industry trends. Thanks to the Internet writers like Pamela Samuels Young rise to success no longer limited by the subjective taste of a small few.
Black Lives Have Less Value
June 9, 2010
Anthony Thomas and Kyron Horman: Two Missing Boys Demonstrate Disparity in Coverage
It’s sad and unfortunate that two boys suddenly vanish without a trace. We ask ourselves a great many questions like who would do such a thing and why. Then there is the question why are greater resources brought to bear in the search for one over the other. Unfortunately, these are editorial decisions that reflect editorial values over community values. The unmistakable conclusion, Kyron Horman is white and has garnered national media attention while Anthony Thomas is black and has received neither local nor national media attention and that black life has less value.