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Grandpa!
Tell Us a Story; Drinking From Ancient Wells
by Orchester Benjamin
SoulViewWorld LLC
Book Reviewed by Emanuel Carpenter
He began taking the shells out of the gun and
sighting down the barrel, and pulled the trigger
listening to the click. All the while he was
pointing the gun in my general direction,
finally he pointed it straight at me, pulled the
trigger, said bang real loud, and I almost
jumped out of the chair. He loaded the gun,
still pointed in my direction, and began talking
to his woman while looking me straight in the
eyes.
“Baby, have you ever heard the expression, if
you find a fool, bump his head.”
“Yeah Daddy Sweet, I heard that the bigger the
fool the harder his head has to be bumped.”
“Well if somebody gave a loaded gun to a
complete stranger, talking about selling it, how
big of a fool is that?”
“That would be the biggest fool I ever heard
about in all of my life. His head should be bump
real hard.”
Though the excerpt above may sound like
something out of the movies, it is a portion of
one man’s true story. The man is Orchester
Benjamin, and he is the one who is learning the
ways of the street the hard way with a gun
pointed at his head. Many years prior, his
grandchildren always had a request of him:
“Grandpa! Tell us a story.” Instead of sitting
them down and telling them the same old nursery
rhymes or Dr. Seuss tales, he asked them to be
patient while he gathered his thoughts. Many
years and words later, his memoir “Grandpa! Tell
us a story; Drinking From Ancient Wells” was
born.
Orchester’s story is no everyday life story
either. Keeping in mind his humble beginnings in
Louisiana where he learned valuable life lessons
from his parents and his maternal and paternal
grandfathers, he tells an intriguing tale of
learned values and humility. As he grew older,
he wanted to be a part of the popular crowd
known as the Village kids (who so happened to be
the ones who got in the most trouble). Even
though he is guided throughout his life by his
African ancestors, Priest Sowa and Priestess
Mabole, it’s the influence of the Village kids
and the motivation to become a street hustler
later in life that sends his life down a
slippery slope of cocaine dealing, addiction,
and incarceration.
Grandpa! Tell us a story is an interesting
memoir that fuses detailed historical facts,
personal philosophy, and everyday life as a man
trying to make it on the mean American streets,
including Los Angeles, Oakland, Oklahoma City,
and more. Rather if you’re reading about his
naivety of trying to sell a loaded gun, trying
to understand his arguments with a preacher
about God’s purpose for us, or absorbing his
take on the history of the Ku Klux Klan,
Frederick Douglas, and slavery, you will not be
bored. It’s easy to tell that this former Black
Panther writes like he speaks like when he tells
us he is getting ahead of himself in the text,
when he shares how being whipped by his mother
only made him slicker, and when he is honest
about never finishing school. The book could use
an editor’s touch. It could also use actual
chapters so that it doesn’t read like one long
speech. And you may have a few what-the-heck
moments as his African ancestors appear to him
throughout the book (especially since this is
non-fiction). But the 73-year-old Benjamin did
accomplish his goal of telling his grandchildren
(and us) an out of-the-ordinary story that can
be handed down to generations in his family and
ours.
List Price: $24.95

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EXCERPT - INTERNAL CHAOS -
Chapter 5 |
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BIO
Author Orchester Benjamin is an old school Hustler and ex-Black panther, 73
years of age, who has spent a life time on the streets playing the Game for fun
and profit; now turned Researcher, Writer, and Historian of the Game.
His time is divided between his children, grandchildren, great grandchildren,
promoting the above trilogy, enjoying the Urban/Street literature movement on
all levels, and working on a second trilogy, Story of the Game the Black
Family play.
Contact
Orchester Benjamin,
Toshsha@msn.com
www.soulviewworld.com |