This one straddles the line somewhere between 2 and 3 stars.
I havent read anything from Omar Tyree since I read Flyy Girl in middle school, so I was looking forward to grabbing a book by him.
I think next time I'll just re-read Flyy Girl (I'm in my 30s now) and grab all my urban fiction reads from women authors.
I only briefly liked Shareef Crawford, and that was in the first few pages before I learned that he had a whole wife back home and was openly flirting with the attractive female news anchor who was interviewing him on live tv about his book. Gross. We learn that they are actively going to counseling, but he still openly cheats on her (and has a kept mistress on the side, in addition to the women he meets in different cities) and basically thinks it's her fault because she won't have sex with him; and he feels he has been duped because they had sex in the beginning and things changed after 10 years of marriage and life happening and children, etc. And her argument? Well OF COURSE she doesn't want to have sex with her husband while he is openly disrespecting her and their marriage, and could possibly bring home STDs from these random women he has no shame in hooking up with. But she's the irrational one? Riiiiight.
And then he proceeds to make a lot of stupid, stupid decisions because of his inflamed male ego (he can do anything, and no one can punk him, because he's from Harlem!) that leads to him endangering the lives of multiple people, some of whom were actual current residents of Harlem telling him that *they* wouldn't even mess around with the things he's messing around with. But, that toxic masculinity will get you every time, I suppose.
The climax came, and I think Tyree took entirely too long to wrap up the book after that. And Polo, Shareef's best friend, gave him the most ass-kissy "you're so great and don't ever change" speech at the end.
Bottom line: I kind of wished that Shareef had been a casualty when the climax hit.
Side note: the editing was not done well in this book. I came across multiple instances of incorrect word usage that should have been caught long before publishing (i.e. your vs you're, worse vs worst, too vs two, to name a few).