” The Game Changer” Author Al-Saadiq Banks

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Author and Publisher Al-Saadiq Banks was born in the seventies, a product of a troubled marriage.  At the age of 5 his parents separated, leaving his mother to raise him single

handedly.  He was an introvert who spent most of his spare time sketching cartoon characters. Academically he excelled way above the average, receiving honors in every subject with math being his favorite.

By the age of 8 he was introduced to boxing.  What started off as him being dragged to the gym by his uncle while he babysat him, turned into a passion.  He picked up on the fundamentals of the game quickly.  What he loved most about the game was the fact that it gave him an outlet to pound away the frustrations that he had been living with during his early years of life.  As talented as he was he never took boxing serious.  He would pop in and out of the gym every year or so.

Al-Saadiq’s love for art led him to a high school for the gifted where he attended as an art major.  Shortly after graduation he enrolled in a college where he majored in Electronic Engineering.  It was during that time period that his life took a turn for the worse.  The lack of funding led him down a road he never saw as a part of his future.

He was faced with the decision of dropping out of college due to lack of tuition money or to do what he had to do to further his education.  He chose the latter.  Al-Saadiq attended college in the morning while hustling crack on the cold and wicked streets at night.  Years later he graduated from college with a 3.4 GPA and obtained his degree.

The praise and honors he received in school were nothing compared to the adulation he received on the street.  By this time the success he had from the street overshadowed his success in school as well as the boxing ring.  He was caught up.  He packed his college degree on the same shelf closet as his boxing gloves and trophies, never looking back.

Finally a few years later he comes to his senses and realizes that he no longer wishes to live that lifestyle.  For the first time ever he looked at boxing as a ticket out of the game.  He enrolled in a local gym and coincidentally the Golden Gloves tournament was being held in three months.  After two and a half months of training Al-Saadiq was faced with the unexpected.

He was gunned down on a Newark street.  That injury kept him out of the gym for months but it didn’t keep him off the streets.  His dream of boxing was deferred as he lived out his dreams on the street.  One year later the exact same month he was gunned down again.

For many years the tug of war of good boy-bad boy conflicted and he had finally had enough of it.  He was fed up with the game and the lifestyle.  The only problem was with the amount of income he had gotten used to earning he couldn’t imagine giving it all up to and live life as a typical nine-to-fiver struggling to make ends meet.  That alone kept him in the game.

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Once again he steps foot back into the gym and in three months the Golden Gloves comes around again.  He registers into the tournament and in a matter of weeks he’s awarded the State Golden Glove Champion title.  As promising as his career may have looked to others it was still quite blurry to him.

A few years later his life is altered tremendously.  The birth of his daughter not only changed his perspective on life but it changed him as a man.  With a daughter to care for in the world he began to fear the results of what she would become if by chance he was taken out of her life by his death on the street or being incarcerated for life.

That fear caused him to confine himself to his home for six months.  He contemplated on what it is that he would do with the rest of his life but he had not a clue.  Then one day out of boredom he begins to jot down events that have taken place in his life.  Six months later he has three books written.

Never once did he consider publishing the books.  He just looked at them as a way to vent and clear his mind of things that he had seen and experienced in his life.  After allowing the closest people to him to read them, they all encouraged him to publish them. In 2002 his first title No Exit was published.

To date Al-Saadiq Banks has written and published nine novels.  He’s the co-founder of True 2 Life Publications.  True 2 Life has just ventured into the world of comics, as Al-Saadiq Banks transforms his fiction based novels into graphic novels and comic books.

In his spare time he’s a boxing instructor and mentor to troubled youth.  He cherishes every opportunity that he’s granted to reach out to not just the youth, but even adults who may be going through the tug of war that he went through in life.  He’s a motivational speaker, who plans to take his show on the road and speak on a national level.

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Hit the link to check out this authors work:

Author Al-Sadiq Banks Books

http://tinyurl.com/ktve4uz

Interview with Mr Gorilla Convict Himself Author and Journalist Seth Ferranti……….

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 Author Seth Ferranti Bio: Seth Ferranti, federal prison register 18205-083, is the Gorilla Convict Writer. In 1993, after spending two years as a top-15 fugitive on the US Marshal’s most wanted list, he was captured and sentenced to 304 months under the federal sentencing guidelines for an LSD Kingpin conviction and committed to the custody of the Attorney General. A first-time, non-violent offender, Ferranti has served 21 years of his 25-year mandatory minimum sentence. His case was widely covered by The Washington Post and Washington Times, and his story was profiled in the pages of Rolling Stone and Don Diva magazine. His current release date is January, 2015. During his incarceration Ferranti has worked to better himself by making preparations for his eventual release back into society. Ferranti earned an AA degree from Penn State, his BA degree from the University of Iowa through correspondence courses, and Masters from California State University, Dominguez Hills. Along with his studies, Ferranti writes about the prison experience.

Writing Royalty: Thank you for agreeing to do this interview for our Blog, I really appreciate it Seth…First I want to say congratulations on your success as an author and journalist.

Author:  Thank you, I appreciate the chance to be featured on Writing Royalty Promotions and your blog. Thanks for taking an interest in my work.

Writing Royalty: How many books and articles have you written so far?

Author/Guest:  I have seven books published to date with three more almost ready to be published and more in the works. I have probably gotten over 500 articles published in magazines and on the Internet so far with a lot of stuff in the works also. I try to stay busy and getting published has been one of my main goals. I write from the cell block and aim to bring readers into my world.

Writing Royalty: Tell us the titles of your books and a little bit about them?

Author/Guest:  My first book was Prison Stories, it’s a collection of short stories on life in prison, all true. Then I wrote Street Legends Vol. 1 and 2, which covered a lot of the street stars that the rappers namedropped in verse like Wayne Perry, The Boobie Boys, Boy George, Pistol Pete and others, six legends in each volume. My Supreme Team book was next that covered the story of Supreme and Prince and their rise to infamy in Queens, New York. Rayful Edmond: Washington DC’s Most Notorious Drug Lord was next and my latest, The Dope Game Misadventures of Fat Cat and Pappy Mason, which chronicles two infamous street legends out hip-hop’s lyrical lore. These are all out on Gorilla Convict Publications. Up next on Gorilla Convict is The Cocaine Dreams of Alpo and Rich Porter. And on Strategic Media Books I have Gorilla Convict: The Prison Writings of Seth Ferranti and two gangland mystery books on Freeway Ricky Ross and White Boy Rick coming soon. All my books are true crime and I get the truth right from the people who they are about.

Writing Royalty: Tell us about your literary journey? What inspired you to become not only an author but a journalist as well?

Author/Guest: I started writing to reach out from prison. I had a lot of time and I wanted my voice to be heard. I wanted to become somebody and be recognized for my talents from here. So I started doing articles and had some success and it just snowballed from there and turned into books and more so I rolled with it. It has given me a lot of satisfaction to get my work published from here and to have been able to build a career from here.

Writing Royalty: How did you come to start writing for Gorilla Convict?

Author/Guest:  I started Gorilla Convict from prison in 2005 through my wife. We put out my first book Prison Stories and went on from there. I started doing a blog and posting content on the website and it just grew and now we are where we are at with me very close to coming home and getting ready to do it big. I have done all this with handcuffs on so imagine when I am free.

Writing Royalty: What is the difference between being and author and a journalist?

Author/Guest:  I think both are being are being a writer so it’s one in the same, an author writes books and a journalist writes articles. So obviously books are bigger projects and take longer. Articles are something you work on for a much shorter period of time. But both are a form of writing, it is just the length of time and effort you put into them that differentiates being a writer or journalist. But a lot of journalists end up writing books.

Writing Royalty: What type of obstacles did you encounter in your journey to success?

Author/Guest:  I have overcome all types of obstacles. First off being in prison and being a writer can cause you all types of problems. I have been thrown in the hole, transferred, had privileges like commissary, phone or email taken away, been harassed routinely, written fictitious incident reports, you name it. The prison officials are bullies and will do everything in their power to convince you not to write without telling you that you cannot write. Plus I have missed a lot of opportunities to advance my career because the feds won’t allow film crews into their prisons. I have had a lot of people and programs interested in interviewing me on film and the feds won’t let them in. So this had denied me an opportunity for exposure.

Writing Royalty: Do you have any aspirations of becoming a publisher in the future?

Author/Guest:  I am a publisher now of my own books and I might publish others. But I see myself going more into film and visual ventures when I am released.

Writing Royalty: What advice would you give someone that wants to become a journalist or an author that may or may not be incarcerated?

Author/Guest:  Don’t give up or gin in. Find your niche, find your market and go for it. Be relentless, be determined and keep pressing. No one is going to discover you if you don’t jump out there. Promote, promote, promote. That is the key and write. Content is king. Find your markets and submit. Submit so much they run your stuff just to be done with you and then cultivate the relationship.

Writing Royalty: What inspired you to go back to school and not only get your Associates but your Bachelors and Masters as well?

Author/Guest:  I wanted to get my education. I was in prison and I wanted to do something productive. I found some programs where I could earn a degree through correspondence courses and I decided to do it. It was a positive move and I had the time and ability to do it so I did. Education and writing became my goals. It was how I spent my time.

Writing Royalty: What lessons did you learn along the way while being an author and journalist while incarcerated?

Author/Guest: I learned to never give up and to hone my craft and to write, write and write some more. I learned to jump out there and promote my work. I learned to edit and market and publish and when I failed I tried again and again until I succeeded.

Writing Royalty: What are your future plans for your life and career now that you are close to being released?

Author/Guest:  I want to make films. I want to promote Gorilla Convict. Do appearances and interviews, all the things I haven’t had the chance to do from here. I am ready and willing to work hard. I have goals and I aim to accomplish them. I am driven and will work overtime until I attain my goals.

Writing Royalty:  If people wanted to get in contact with you, how would they do so? How can they find your books or articles?

Author/Guest:  I can be contacted through gorillaconvict.com or on Facebook. My books are available on Amazon and on Gorilla Convict and my articles are all over the Internet, Google my name and check them out.

Writing Royalty:  Thank you Seth Ferranti for taking time to do this interview, we wish you nothing but continued success.

Author/Guest:  I appreciate it and good looking out.

 

Get Know Author K’wan……..

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K’wan is a multiple literary award winner and bestselling author of over a dozen titles which include: Gangsta, Road Dawgz, Street Dreams, Hoodlum, Eve, Hood Rat, Blow, Still Hood, Gutter, Section 8, From Harlem with Love, The Leak, Welfare Wifeys, Eviction Notice, Love & Gunplay, Animal, Purple Reign, Little Nikki Grind and Animal II. K’wan is also the author of several dark fantasy novels written under a pseudonym.

K’wan has been featured in: Vibe, Pages, King, The Library Journal, Entertainment Weekly, The New York Press, and Time Magazine, to name a few. K’wan was also the recipient of the 2012 and 13 Street Lit Book Award Medals (SLBAM) in adult fiction for Eviction Notice and Animal. His credits also include featured commentary in the award winning Documentary Iceberg Slim: Portrait of a Pimp (produced by Ice-T) as well as a reoccurring guest role on TV-One’s Celebrity Crime Files.

K’wan currently resides in New Jersey where he is working on his next novel. Please visit his website: http://www.Kwanfoye.com