Title: ON TOP OF THE WORLD (UNTIL THE BELL CHIMES)
Author: David Lamb
Publisher: Woolly Mammoth Books
Pages: 240
Genre: Contemporary Fiction/Contemporary Romance/Multicultural/Humor/Satire
Author: David Lamb
Publisher: Woolly Mammoth Books
Pages: 240
Genre: Contemporary Fiction/Contemporary Romance/Multicultural/Humor/Satire
2016 BEST
FICTION-Pacific Book Awards. FROM
THE FUNNY AND NATURALLY BRILLIANT DAVID LAMB, award-winning playwright of
the New York Times celebrated play, Platanos Y Collard Greens, comes
a modern spin on Dickens' classic tale that perfectly combines humor and romance
in a story re-imagined for our digital, consumerist age. This
version of Scrooge and Belle is familiar, yet unlike any you've come across
before. Scrooge, or rather Scrooje, is music's biggest superstar, with one
hundred million albums sold, fifteen million devoted YouTube subscribers, two
and a half million Facebook likes, and twenty-five million fanatical Twitter
followers known as Scroojites. Belle, is a legal shark who gulps down her
opposition voraciously and whose beauty and stunning figure causes traffic
accidents as she zips through the sidewalks of Manhattan stylishly adorned and taking no
prisoners. They never imagined being music's most powerful couple, but
that's exactly what happened when Belle fell head over heels and gave the
Coke-bottle glasses wearing, plaid and stripe attired, scrawny, biggest nerd on
her college campus the ultimate makeover, turning him into a fashion impresario
whose style sets trends from Milan to NY Fashion Week and who can be seen
courtside at the NBA Finals sporting a perfectly-fitted cashmere suit.
Then it happens. Belle realizes too late that she's created a chart-topping
monster as Scrooje's ego explodes and he starts acting a fool. Now, it's
been three years since they ve spoken. But tonight at Hollywood s biggest red carpet event, with the
whole world watching, they'll be given a second chance. Will Scrooje
listen to the ghostly-advice of Marley, his best friend since the fourth grade,
who at the time of his untimely drowning at his Brazilian poolside birthday
bash was as big a star as Scrooje? Will Scrooje finally do right by his number
one artist, Cratchit, a genius comedian, who Scrooje invariably rip offs every
chance he gets? And with twenty-five million viewers tuned in will
Scrooje finally shed his ego, jeopardize his image and declare his love for
Belle, the one he betrayed and let slip away? Second chances don't often
come around. Will Belle even give him a chance? Mixing heart, soul,
bling and romance in a fresh, original satire about race, class and celebrity
worship Lamb establishes himself as one of the most talented and amazing
writers today. And leaves no doubt that the Pacific Book Awards chose wisely
when they selected On Top Of The World as the year's Best Fiction.
Purchase Information:
Amazon | iTunes | B&N
First
Chapter:
Life’s a Beach; I’m just playing in the sand. I had to
thank Lil Wayne for that one. It was my motto. I had it inscribed on the door
of my office underneath my crown.
Why did I have a crown?
Because I’m musical royalty. That’s
why I’d insisted the government carve my face on Mt. Rushmore. People
said I was crazy spending $5 million suing to make it happen. But hey, a
king must get his due.
Look, I know the Revolution of
1776 liberated America from the grip of kings. But I was a new kind of king,
one who’d created an empire no poor boy had any business ever dreaming
of. Yes, Fitty netted $100 million when Coca-Cola gobbled up Vitaminwater,
whoop-de-damn-do. And yes, Jigga sold Rocawear to Iconix for $204 million, big
damn deal. Peanuts. I had my eyes on the man Forbes proclaimed the
richest human being who ever walked the earth—my own handsome ancestor (and one
day, DNA tests will prove this), Mansa Musa, the emperor of Mali whose face
adorns history’s most famous map, the Catalan Atlas, where he’s pictured
seated regally and holding a big-ass gold nugget. The man Forbes
estimated to be worth $400 billion.
Now, this wasn’t to say my wealth was
in Mansa Musa’s neighborhood (truth be told, I was still trying to reach
Diddy’s financial zip code), but no one could deny what I’d achieved. Musical
royalty; forty million albums sold; a $100 million concert tour; the
hottest-selling clothing lines; and my sneaker sales were on the road to making
Air Jordan’s look like chump change.
This was my destiny.
From the moment of my birth, I was
enamored with my own distinction. How do you think I was so motivated to beat
those millions of others racing for the prize? I guess the blame for
what some deride as my massive ego goes to the boisterous celebrations
sweeping the country the year I was born. Two hundred and some odd years after
the Thirteen Colonies declared independence; I happily broke free from nine
months of solitary confinement in my mother’s belly. It was 1984, and once I
escaped, I couldn’t wait to get the party started. From the first slap on my
bare behind to my first scream that soon followed, I absorbed America’s Olympic
celebrations like a sponge. I decided right then and there I wanted my name to
live forever.
Okay, so that sounds a little much,
but just imagine if you’d grown up a little Black boy named after a Charles
Dickens’ character. Your ego might be a little warped, too.
So please, before you judge, hear the
whole story. Before I was headlining concerts, people had no idea how to
pronounce my name; and even today, most believe it’s my nom de plume, completely
unaware that it’s my family’s legacy, the result of an overseer’s bitter
attempt at vengeance. How else could I end up with a name like “Scrooʝe?”
Yes, today Dickens is one of
the world’s most beloved writers. But that wasn’t always the case. Back in the
1840s, a young Charles Dickens decided to, as the English say, “take a trip
across the pond” to see what life was like in America.
When he published his travel memoir, American
Notes, nine months later, the excrement hit the fan.
Dickens had unmasked the brutality of
what the good folks of the South called “the peculiar institution,” thereby
helping spur Britain’s expansion of abolition with the passing of the Indian
Slavery Act of 1843, and pissing off slaveholders that Dickens had opened his
big fat mouth in the first place.
As fate would have it, in this
overheated atmosphere, my great-great-great-grandfather was born on a
plantation run by Virginia’s cruelest overseer. Who, according to the family
history my grandma passed down to me, was so angry when he learned Dickens had
printed one of his runaway slave ads in American Notes, that his face
turned red as an apple while he cursed like a sailor. He then promptly ordered
“ten Nigras whipped” because Dickens had the gall not to recognize how
kind such a fine gentlemen as himself was to the slaves. Not one to take
insults lightly, the overseer started a petition to have Dickens’ books banned
from the States then tried to sue him for libel. A year and a half later,
after having failed on both fronts, he vowed to extract his revenge by naming
the next slave born on the plantation after Ebenezer Scrooge. And just to be
sure to pour a little extra salt on the wound, he decided to change the order
of the names because as he said, “Nigras get everything ass backwards.”
So that was how my
great-great-great-grandfather came to be named Scrooge Ebenezer.
Miraculously, despite enduring
indescribable brutality on the plantation, Scrooge Ebenezer ultimately
triumphed. During Reconstruction, he became one of the first
Black congressmen. Since that time, all of his male descendants have been named
“Scrooge.” As the decades passed and times changed, my father decided to give
the spelling some Ebonics flair.
Now you have to understand, my father
(in his youth) had been the embodiment of cool, so much so that he’d once run a
marathon at high noon in August in Arizona—without so much as breaking a sweat,
all while delivering up-to-the-minute analysis of the race as he ran.
Naturally, a man whose magnetism was so strong that college debutantes
patiently waited in line to ask to be his high school prom date, wanted to
bestow some of his overflowing charisma on his firstborn son. So when Dad came
up with his Ebonics-inspired translation, he proudly proclaimed: “Now if that ain’t
cool, I don’t know what is.”
Unfortunately for me, it was the first
time in my father’s life his cool barometer was off. All of the fallout
from Dad’s ill-timed miscalculation fell upon my scrawny shoulders (or
more accurately, upon my young ears). On a daily basis, my classmates took
unbridled delight in twisting my name into unflattering caricatures.
“Screwed-yuh,” was at the top of the
list, but there were plenty of others. “Screw-gee poop” and “Scrooʝenezer”
were popular. But “Ebonsneezer” was the hardest to shake because it had a
revival every allergy season when I would have sneezing fits so loud and
powerful, I felt like I could blow the windows off their hinges. Even my
teachers, who weren’t trying to make fun of me, struggled with the
pronunciation, mangling my name so many times I lost track. I would cringe
every time Mr. Manigold came to my name when he checked attendance.
“Scroogie Ebon-eye-zer” was the closest he ever came to getting it right, and
that was only after a half-dozen other mess-ups.
As a little boy, I’d lie awake
wondering why my father couldn’t have just kept the original spelling. I
promised myself that if it were my destiny to be named after a Victorian
character then one day the whole world would know my name.
I kept my promise.
Wish my pops were here to see what
I’ve done. Sometimes onstage—even with twenty-two thousand people screaming my
name—I’d feel all alone and retreat inside the music, letting the rhythmic bass
lines invade my soul until I was one with it. Then everything would stop, and I
could sense my heart pulsating on the downbeat. I’d close my eyes and imagine I
was three years old again, laughing as my father spun me in the air, telling me
I could achieve anything.
And it felt beautiful.
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