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SUMMER OF HAMN by Chuck D Kirkus Star

SUMMER OF HAMN

Hollowpointlessness Aiding Mass Nihilism

by Chuck D ; illustrated by Chuck D

Pub Date: Oct. 3rd, 2023
ISBN: 9781636141527
Publisher: Enemy Books/Akashic

With his latest work of graphic nonfiction, Chuck D uses his art and hip-hop rhymes to show how the U.S. has been held hostage by gun violence and a growing sense of hopelessness.

Unlike the sprawling yet powerful collection Stewdio, which tried to make sense of the chaos of the early period of the Covid-19 pandemic, the author’s latest has a tight focus and engaging structure. The Public Enemy frontman draws impressionistic portraits of news events and then crafts a rhyme to explain it. “At every turn this summer, so much visible hate…Salman Rushdie…is bum rushed and stabbed on stage in Western New York State,” he writes to accompany a poignant sketch of the incident, including the looks of horror from the audience. The bulk of the events Chuck D chronicles are shootings—at a convenience store in California and a shopping mall in Ohio, or the assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe—and the continuing disastrous effects of climate change, including flooding in Las Vegas and Texas. This is heavy material, but just as Flavor Flav provided enough levity to balance the hard-hitting subject matter of Public Enemy’s albums, Chuck D’s outside interests—basketball, space exploration, and, of course, hip-hop—lighten the mood enough to keep readers moving through this compelling narrative. Few recaps of the summer of 2022 would include drought’s effect on Lake Mead, a critique of Ye’s fashion designs for The Gap, and the importance of the trade of the Utah Jazz’s Donovan Mitchell to the Cleveland Cavaliers. But that’s how Chuck D’s fascinating mind works, and this chronicle of his interests is both brilliant and relatable. He closes with a poignant plea: “Indian summer awaits to cool down the heat and the hate…Protect your fam this fall…The end of hamn.”

A focused, fresh, urgent text filled with pictures worth 1,000 words and rhymes worth thousands more.