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Black literati had best take note right here and right now. There’s a new writer on the block and he’s coming real, he’s coming hard and he’s coming strong. His name is Relentless Aaron, and let the name be your first forewarning. He is relentless in his mission to take the literary world by storm.
Packing the power of the streets, heralding the energy of all of Harlem, past and present, and wielding his pen like the ultimate weapon, Relentless is bringing it with his mythical debut, Push, a novel of epic proportions.
The first release from his own publishing house, Relentless Content, Push is the first in a series of 30 tales combining hardcore urban fiction and black erotica to create episodic mayhem.
Available now at www.RelentlessAaron.com and in bookstores nationwide on December 18, Push is already the buzz on the streets of New York. Reginald “Push” Jackson, the main protagonist, is a criminalized modern day hero of sorts. A hit man who is the product of the streets and the penal system, his journey is one that weaves a web of intrigue involving a multitude of characters. From the boardroom to the bedroom, from the beauty parlor to Harlem’s social hot spots, we become entangled in their world. With the holiday season as its backdrop, Push pushes its reader to the edge, then pulls them back in for more!
Evidenced by the fact that Relentless was just released from prison less than two months ago, his “relentless” passion to succeed is of strong accord. “I used prison as time to not only reflect, but to create,” reveals Relentless. “Here I was surrounded by a multitude of hardened criminals; murderers, gun-runners, drug kingpins and other personalities, each with their very own life’s tragedies to bare. I took this opportunity to not only study characterization and personality types, but I paid close attention to the way people acted and why. I practiced this as a primary activity… I consumed myself with my work. But what I found out in the meantime was that I was accomplishing something. I was building a daily routine of creating my own stories and urban legends. It is within the confines of a cold prison cell where my narratives came to life, and where, ironically, I was more alive than I’ve ever been.”
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