SOLDES
Jusqu'à -70% sur une sélection d'articles*
Nouveauté
TN A Reckoning in Houston. Tales From The Darker Side, #4
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
, qui est-ce ?Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8235916562
- EAN9798235916562
- Date de parution19/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
TN stands for "That Nigga" at the street level first, as the brutal shorthand used to reduce Doug to a disposable category rather than a person. Over time, it expands beyond one man into a symbol that neighborhoods, officials, and the city itself interpret in different ways, but the origin is that violent reduction of Black identity into a label. TN is a gritty Houston thriller about Doug Johnson, a Black veteran whose life is shattered when he is brutally attacked and mistaken for someone marked by a hidden network of violence, power, and disposability.
As he survives the beating, recovers, and begins tracing the men who ordered it, Doug discovers that the name "TN" is more than a street tag-it is a symbol of how the city, its institutions, and its underworld reduce certain people to categories rather than human beings. Moving through North Houston neighborhoods, alleys, motels, and back channels of influence, the novel becomes a tense reckoning with race, trauma, corruption, and the cost of being seen as expendable in a city that profits from forgetting.
This book was written from a place of witness, grief, and refusal. It is a work of fiction, but it is also shaped by the realities that Black veterans, crime victims, the displaced, and the forgotten know too well: how quickly a person can be reduced to a category, how easily institutions can fail the vulnerable, and how often the language of concern arrives after the damage is already done. Some of the events, settings, and social pressures in this novel may feel uncomfortably familiar.
That is intentional. Houston is not just a backdrop here; it is part of the book's moral landscape, a city of beauty, ambition, contradiction, and unequal protection. The story asks what happens when violence is not treated as an interruption, but as something woven into the systems that claim to manage it. At its center, TN is about visibility and disposability. It asks who gets believed, who gets blamed, who gets protected, and who gets written off.
It also asks what it costs a person to survive injury in a world that wants only the simplest version of their pain. If this novel unsettles, it should. But I also hope it honors those whose names were shortened, misread, erased, or replaced by labels that made neglect easier. This book is for them.- kiney©?
As he survives the beating, recovers, and begins tracing the men who ordered it, Doug discovers that the name "TN" is more than a street tag-it is a symbol of how the city, its institutions, and its underworld reduce certain people to categories rather than human beings. Moving through North Houston neighborhoods, alleys, motels, and back channels of influence, the novel becomes a tense reckoning with race, trauma, corruption, and the cost of being seen as expendable in a city that profits from forgetting.
This book was written from a place of witness, grief, and refusal. It is a work of fiction, but it is also shaped by the realities that Black veterans, crime victims, the displaced, and the forgotten know too well: how quickly a person can be reduced to a category, how easily institutions can fail the vulnerable, and how often the language of concern arrives after the damage is already done. Some of the events, settings, and social pressures in this novel may feel uncomfortably familiar.
That is intentional. Houston is not just a backdrop here; it is part of the book's moral landscape, a city of beauty, ambition, contradiction, and unequal protection. The story asks what happens when violence is not treated as an interruption, but as something woven into the systems that claim to manage it. At its center, TN is about visibility and disposability. It asks who gets believed, who gets blamed, who gets protected, and who gets written off.
It also asks what it costs a person to survive injury in a world that wants only the simplest version of their pain. If this novel unsettles, it should. But I also hope it honors those whose names were shortened, misread, erased, or replaced by labels that made neglect easier. This book is for them.- kiney©?



















