
- 512 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
New York Times bestselling author Life After Death, the hip-hop generation's beloved and most compelling storyteller, delivers a powerful story about love and loyalty, strength and family.
In her bestselling novel, The Coldest Winter Ever, Sister Souljah introduced the world to Midnight, a brave but humble lieutenant to a prominent underworld businessman. Now, in a highly anticipated follow-up to her million-selling masterpiece, she brings readers into the life and dangerously close to the heart of this silent, fearless young man.
Raised in a wealthy, influential, Islamic African family, Midnight enjoys a life of comfort, confidence, and protection. Midnight's father provides him with a veil of privilege and deep, devoted love, but he never hides the truth about the fierce challenges of the world outside of his estate. So when Midnight's father's empire is attacked, he sends Midnight with his mother to the United States.
In the streets of Brooklyn, a young Midnight uses his Islamic mind-set and African intelligence to protect the ones he loves, build a business, reclaim his wealth and status, and remain true to his beliefs.
Midnight, a handsome and passionate young man, attracts many women. How he interacts and deals with them is a unique adventure. This is a highly sensual and tremendous love story about what a man is willing to risk and give to the women he loves most. Midnight will remain in your mind and beat in your heart for a lifetime.
Her "raw and true voice" (Publishers Weekly) will both soothe and arouse you. In a beautifully written and masterfully woven story, Sister Souljah has given us Midnight, and solidified her presence as the mother of all contemporary urban literature.
In her bestselling novel, The Coldest Winter Ever, Sister Souljah introduced the world to Midnight, a brave but humble lieutenant to a prominent underworld businessman. Now, in a highly anticipated follow-up to her million-selling masterpiece, she brings readers into the life and dangerously close to the heart of this silent, fearless young man.
Raised in a wealthy, influential, Islamic African family, Midnight enjoys a life of comfort, confidence, and protection. Midnight's father provides him with a veil of privilege and deep, devoted love, but he never hides the truth about the fierce challenges of the world outside of his estate. So when Midnight's father's empire is attacked, he sends Midnight with his mother to the United States.
In the streets of Brooklyn, a young Midnight uses his Islamic mind-set and African intelligence to protect the ones he loves, build a business, reclaim his wealth and status, and remain true to his beliefs.
Midnight, a handsome and passionate young man, attracts many women. How he interacts and deals with them is a unique adventure. This is a highly sensual and tremendous love story about what a man is willing to risk and give to the women he loves most. Midnight will remain in your mind and beat in your heart for a lifetime.
Her "raw and true voice" (Publishers Weekly) will both soothe and arouse you. In a beautifully written and masterfully woven story, Sister Souljah has given us Midnight, and solidified her presence as the mother of all contemporary urban literature.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weāve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere ā even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youāre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Midnight by Sister Souljah in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Letteratura & Letteratura generale. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
WORD TO LIFE
I am not who you think I am. If you love me, you love me for the wrong reasons.
Females tell me they love me because Iām tall. They love when I stand over them and look down. They love when I lay them down and my height and body weight dominates them.
Females tell me they love me because Iām pure black. They say they never seen a black man so masculine, so pretty, so beautiful before.
Females say they love my eyes. Theyāre jet black too. Women claim they find a passion in them so forceful that theyāll do anything I say.
Females tell me they love my body. They beg me for a hug even when thereās nothing between me and them. They want to be captured in my embrace, and press their breasts against my chest.
Some females ask if they can just touch me. Some tremble when my hands touch them. They say they love the muscles in my arms. They surrender when I lift them up. They whine and moan in rapture. Some cry their pleasure. Some shake. Some pee.
Some of āem even say they love the way my teeth look in my mouth and how my feet look in my kicks.
Females tell me they love the way I walk, like Iām soon to own the world.
Most females say they love that Iām quiet. Then shiver when I finally talk.
All of the women show me that they love my guns, the fact that I walk with two of them at times. Even the ones who get scared fall in love with their fear of me. Then they come at me even harder.
Some females say Iām too serious, then shield their eyes to hide their feelings from the shine when I finally smile.
I canāt lie, I enjoy the good times that some of these women offer me. But I donāt take them to heart. I know that they donāt really even know me. All the shit that they are in love with is just my style and my looks, all window dressing.
I know that a man is his own beliefs, his own ideas and actions. If you knew me, you would know what I believe. If you knew what I believe, then you would understand how I think. You would understand my ideas and actions. Only then should you decide. Either you believe what I believe, or you admire what I believe and want to get with those beliefs. If not, in the long run, we got nothing in common. I canāt take you seriously. I gotta go. You got nothing that makes me want to stay.
I donāt come from where you come from. I donāt think like you do. My whole situation is different. I come from a country of real men who take real life, real serious.
I wouldnāt trade places with an American-born man for any amount of cash.
Where Iām from, a son has a first name and three last names. The three last names are the names of his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. Any male who cannot identify his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather is already lost.
These three names are what makes a boy who he is. There is no talk of role models and celebrities. A son is raised under his fatherās wing, with a grandfather to guide and a great-grandfather as a blueprint, plus an army of uncles nearby.
Where Iām from, a man does not bow to any other man. A man bows down only to Allah. Only Allah created the heavens, the galaxies, the universe, and all of the millions of creatures within.
My father had three wives. Not one wife, one wifey, and a bunch of random bitches on the side.
Where I am from, a man wants to marry a woman and establish a strong family. A man can have more than one wife as long as he can treat them all fairly and provide them with love, separate homes, food, guidance, and presence.
There is no such thing as domestic drama. A woman feels fortunate to be selected by a quality husband, a family man, who will be by her side for her entire lifetime. Families are permanent.
When a man is ready to build his family, he selects a woman who he likes, who is from a family who raised her right, a woman who knows how to love and live. She has to be good for him, his beliefs and plans for life. Someone who brings him peace, progress, and pleasure. Then he is down for her for real.
She is down for him too because she feels his strength, craves his love and attention, feels safe tucked at his side, and is confident that every day he is making the right moves for her, his family, and himself.
Our women donāt argue with their man. A man knows what he is supposed to do and not do. It is the same thing he watched his own father do and not do. So he does it. Even if a man selects the wrong path, his punishment is between himself and Allah. His woman cannot punish him, judge him, or nag him to death.
In my country, a wife is not a whore or ex-whore. Every move a woman makes matters. She can bring dishonor to her man and family even with a simple glance at another man, if it is held for too long.
Even where I am from, there are whores. They know their place too. They stay within the walls of the illegal whorehouse, never to be glorified, honored, claimed, or married. A whore, where I am from, is the opposite of arrogant. She is used but never celebrated by decent men or women. She knows that she can never enjoy the lifestyle and contentment of a respected sister, daughter, mother, or wife.
The punishment for a good woman who comes from a good family and suddenly behaves whorish is severe. She will be isolated by her parents, family, and friends. Her father and mother may lock her away and confine her to one room in the house. In some cases, she is even murdered by her own husband, father, or brother for bringing shame and dishonor to her family and the people who raised, guided, loved, and provided for her.
The family member who commits the murder is not arrested. The whole country acknowledges that a woman is sacred. Every move she makes is either building her family up or breaking it down. Every thought she has is felt and considered by her children. Every word she speaks either teaches or misleads. She must remain honorable, pure, and righteous, otherwise there will be no happiness, no family, and no reason to exist.
Mouthing off; fucking her manās friends, brothers, and cousins; running away with the children; aborting the babies; lying about who is the father of her children; not knowing who the father is; yelling and disrespecting; doing drugs; drinking; parading around mostly naked; acting crazy; our men donāt stand for that. We have not experienced that. We never will.
Our women know their place. They stay in it and live and thrive there. They remain there happily. Our women give love and are loved even more. She is respected, protected, and provided for. She lives proud and at peace.
Where I am from, liquor is illegal and forbidden. We believe that it makes a man behave with ignorance. After drinking liquor, the next step, we believe, is to betray God, and destroy yourself and your family.
In my country, homosexuality is nonexistent. For the absolute majority it is unknown and undone. There have been one or two of those who have traveled out to other places in Europe or America and come back with this bizarre behavior. However, they could never remain with us. Their homosexuality resulted in suicides, or they just turned up missing.
There are no tears for the man who enters into the exit, and builds a life where there can be no balance, reproduction, or family.
Where I am from, adultery is a crime for a man or a woman. Even to fuck someone elseās sister or daughter just because you feel like it or like the way she looks, without approaching her family for marriage, means that you have brought about a battle between dishonored families, yours and hers. The man who commits adultery will be punished by his family. The woman who commits adultery will be considered ruined.
ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢
Where I am from, men work. Whether he works his own land and is paid in the foods the Earth produces; whether he works someone elseās land; whether he is paid in cash, cattle, or otherwise; he works. Hard work is a manās way of providing for and demonstrating that he loves his family.
Each man must have a business of products or services. His product might be fish, meats, vegetables, fruits, jewelry, clothing, crafts, furniture, vehicles, parts and supplies, or other items. Or he may provide services as a doctor, carpenter, construction worker, engineer, lawyer, driver, educator, or performer. But no man can sit doing nothing. His family, backed up by the entire community, would never allow it.
When I talk about where I am from, which is almost never, both males and females feel uneasy. Some look at me in disbelief, like Iām a fucking liar. Others stare off in complete boredom, like it is not a life they would ever want to live. But I feel fine. People where I am from are happy, while almost everybody I know in America feels fucked up, empty, and dissatisfied, especially the Black people.
At fourteen years young, I became a citizen of the United States. It was supposed to be a great day, to be remembered for a lifetime. There we were, becoming a part of what is known as the best country in the world, America, after having been born and living inside of what Americans consider the worst place in the world, the continent of Africa.
We got dressed up and took the A train to City Hall in New York City. We recited some things that we had already memorized. Then it became official.
I should say it became legal. I was an American on paper. I never became one in my heart or mind.
The year I became an American was the same year I got locked up. I went from the projects, to juvenile detention, to prison. Each year I became more and more familiar with the American Blacks. The ones who look just like me. They range from very light skin to my rich dark color, as it is back home. When I first arrived, they were Afro-Americans, then Blacks, then African Americans, and eventually niggas.
They talked like they were the most powerful, clever motherfuckers on the planet. They looked down on other Blacks arriving from any other country in the world. They hated every accent besides their own. They was quick to catch an attitude and say some shit that I could tell they really knew nothing about.
There was no real way for me to separate myself from them. We all looked the same, wore the same clothes, spoke the same slang. All united by our Air Jordan kicks.
I donāt talk a lot. Where Iām from, the boys and men are trained to leave the blabbering to young girls.
It wasnāt too long before I realized that if I said nothing for the rest of my life, shit would only get worse. Iām telling my story so Black people worldwide will know that we wasnāt always fucked up. Also, that a good life takes great effort and sacrifice, but feels so much better than what we all got now. Besides, if the authentic men donāt say shit, there will be no evidence that real men really do exist.
Living side by side with niggas, and watching them play themselves every second of every day, the broke ones all the way up to the rich ones, is killing me.
ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢
Iām not a preacher, politician, pimp, or celebrity. Most of them couldnāt go to hell quick enough for me. A man who doesnāt say what he means or do what he says, craves attention and misuses it when he gets it, doesnāt share what he knows and earns, deserves death.
I am not who you think I am. My people are not who you think they are. Our culture and traditions are unknown to you. Sometimes it takes someone from the outside to show you how you look and do. If youāre American born and raised, youāre bound to get it twisted. You canāt see yourselves or donāt know yourselves. Youāre too accustomed to looking at life from only one fucked-up angle.
ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢Ā Ā Ā ā¢
Everything you have ever seen or heard about Africa is wrong. My African grandfather taught me that the storyteller is the most powerful person in the world after God. My grandfather said be careful who you listen to and what they are saying. The storyteller is clever and masterful and has already decided exactly what he wants you to think and believe.
The storyteller has the power to make people feel good or bad about themselves. The storyteller has the power to make people feel strong or weak, ugly or beautiful, confident or defeated.
Unfortunately, all of the stories being told to Blacks in America, Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean have made Blacks worldwide feel low, weak, crazy, backward, and powerless. So low that the storyteller has set the conditions for Blacks to be robbed of all of their stuff and too stupid to recognize it.
So put your brews and blunts on pause. Rock with me for a few.
2
BEFORE MIDNIGHT
African born. My father was not a king, but he was a phenomenon. The things he taught and showed me were more valuable than the three sparkling, three-carat diamonds he placed in the palm of my hand.
My father said not every man is qualified to be king. Not every man should want to be king. When unqualified men become king, they destroy everyone one way or another because of their ignorance, greed, or anger. Every day they live with the fear that it will be exposed that they do not deserve their wealth and do not really know how to rule.
My father was the advisor to the prime minister of the Sudan, the most powerful man in our country. He was also the advisor to an extremely popular and influential Southern Sudanese king. My father was a great thinker, the man with the ideas that the king and prime minister pretended theyād thought of themselves. This placed my father in a position of power, quiet power. But it also put him in the position of working to bring two deeply separated parts of one nation together. He was constantly being studied and watched and eventually hated by a handful of men who could not compare. These same men, who couldnāt think or see straight on their own, had no vision of the power that would come through unity. They envied my father, rejected his thoughts and ideas, yet imitated his style and finesse.
When crooked men feel threatened, and have no chance of competing with or matching the intelligence and maneuvers of a man who they see as their rival, they begin to use their insecurity to set that man up and bear false witness against him. They donāt stop until they bring him down, drive him out, and eliminate him from holding on to something they could never have achieved fair and square.
⢠⢠ā¢
My father taught me to lay low. Donāt be the asshole who wants to be seen and celebrated all day, every day. Be cool. Take it easy. Carry out your plans in life, slow and steady. Push hard.
My father pushed hard, loved hard, lived hard, making great use of every minute and moment. A scientist, he graduated from the University of Khartoum at age twenty. He earned his masterās degree at the Sorbonne University in Paris, France. He completed his Ph.D. at Columbia University in the United States of America.
At age twenty-six he returned home a doctor of science. He reminded everyone that Africa was the best place in the world. He didnāt just say it. He meant it. He moved back in and worked the ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Dedication
- Chapter 1: Word to Life
- Chapter 2: Before Midnight
- Chapter 3: The Three Pigs
- Chapter 4: DeQuan
- Chapter 5: The Lost Boys
- Chapter 6: Umma
- Chapter 7: Quiet Money
- Chapter 8: Upstate New York
- Chapter 9: Gold
- Chapter 10: Heavenly Paradise
- Chapter 11: Midnight
- Chapter 12: Akemi
- Chapter 13: Girls, Guns, & Friends
- Chapter 14: Recruiters
- Chapter 15: Good Intentions
- Chapter 16: Sudana
- Chapter 17: Agreements
- Chapter 18: Private Lessons
- Chapter 19: Catching Feelings
- Chapter 20: Show and Prove
- Chapter 21: Vega
- Chapter 22: A Sweeter Love
- Chapter 23: The Insults
- Chapter 24: Islam, Love, and Sex
- Chapter 25: Virgins
- Chapter 26: Sensei
- Chapter 27: Hood Chicks
- Chapter 28: Conflict
- Chapter 29: The Contract
- Chapter 30: The Wedding
- Chapter 31: Learning Her Body
- Chapter 32: Bangs
- Chapter 33: Loose Ends
- Chapter 34: Reputation
- Chapter 35: My Heart
- Chapter 36: The Black Team
- Chapter 37: The Ferris Wheel
- Chapter 38: Heaven or Hell
- Chapter 39: The Calm
- Chapter 40: The Connection
- Chapter 41: Game
- Chapter 42: Yes
- Chapter 43: Doing It
- Chapter 44: Friendship
- Chapter 45: Grown
- Chapter 46: The White Zone
- Chapter 47: Rat
- Chapter 48: Naja
- Chapter 49: The Key
- Chapter 50: The Rope
- Chapter 51: Sideways
- Chapter 52: Warmer
- Chapter 53: Africa & Asia
- Chapter 54: Paying Up
- Chapter 55: Bus Stop
- Chapter 56: No Gods on Earth
- Chapter 57: Out
- Chapter 58: The Gifts
- Chapter 59: The Closing
- Chapter 60: Grinding
- Chapter 61: Celebration
- Acknowledgments
- āLife After Deathā Teaser
- About the Author
- Copyright