Tag Archives: Urban Lit/Street Lit

Jack$boi: A Tale Of Urban Terror Virtual Book Tour

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Jack$boi: A Tale Of Urban Terror cover

 

Urban Lit/Street Lit

Date Published: 01-19-2016

 

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“Only clean what’s dirty.”

 

Torin Adeyemi is a quiet janitor at a Baltimore high school. But when the sun
goes down, he becomes Jackboi, a ruthless vigilante with a knife and a
mission. Haunted by a violent past in Haiti and burdened by the broken city
around him, Torin has only one rule: punish the wicked and protect the
innocent.

Each night, he walks the streets, cleaning up what the system ignores. Pimps,
abusers, dealers, corrupt cops. They all bleed the same. And when justice
fails, Jackboi delivers his own.

Jack$ Boi is a gritty urban thriller that blends psychological depth with raw
street energy. It is part street lit, part crime fiction, and part emotional
reckoning. This is not just a hood tale. It is a story about trauma,
vengeance, and survival in a city that never sleeps and never forgives.

Perfect for fans of:

Sister Souljah
Donald Goines
Iceberg Slim
Vigilante justice and anti-hero thrillers
Gritty, emotionally charged street fiction

This book delivers:

A haunting, complex anti-hero
Lyrical writing with a brutal edge
Gritty Baltimore streets that feel alive
A deep dive into trauma, family, and moral reckoning
He is not a savior. He is not a monster. He is the man the streets created.
If you like your fiction raw, real, and unforgettable, Jack$ Boi will stay
with you long after the last page.

 

Early Reviews

 


“A gritty, realistic look at the streets. King doesn’t just tell a story, he
puts you in the thick of it. The character development for Jack$Boi is
outstanding—a true antihero you can’t stop watching.”
— Urban
Fiction Review


“The pacing is relentless; I finished this in a single sitting. The suspense
builds perfectly, culminating in an explosive finale. Fans of serious,
authentic urban terror fiction will find their next addiction here.”

Goodreads Reviewer


“Darrell A. King has mastered the art of suspense in the setting of inner-city
life. It’s violent, complex, and emotionally charged. Absolutely five stars
for its unflinching honesty.”
— Online Book Club

 

Jack$boi: A Tale Of Urban Terror tablet

 

EXCERPT

The alley off North Avenue in Sandtown-Winchester reeked of piss and rotting trash, a concrete wound slicing through Baltimore’s battered west side. 

Torin Adeniyi crouched behind a rusted dumpster, its jagged edges biting into his palms, his breath shallow and controlled. The April night was cool, but sweat beaded beneath his black ski mask, the wool clinging to his skin like a second scar. His eyes, dark and unyielding, tracked the scene twenty feet away, where a flickering streetlamp cast a sickly yellow glow over crumbling brick walls. Shadows twisted like spirits, and the distant wail of a siren blended with the low thump of trap music from a passing car. In his right hand, Shakita gleamed—a seven-inch combat knife, her blade worn but razor-sharp, a relic from a life he couldn’t escape. To the streets, he was Jungle, a phantom who carved justice into the flesh of Baltimore’s predators. To himself, he was still Torin, a Haitian boy who’d lost everything and found only rage to fill the void.

The air was thick with the tang of cheap liquor and weed, mingling with the alley’s decay—spoiled food, motor oil, the faint metallic hint of blood from some earlier violence. Torin’s senses, honed in Haiti’s jungles, cataloged every detail: the scuffle of rats inside the dumpster, the faint drip of a broken pipe, the uneven rhythm of his own pulse. He adjusted his crouch, muscles taut, ready to spring. Shakita felt alive, her weight a comfort, her steel whispering memories of blood and survival. He’d named her at eleven, a child soldier in a militia camp, when Commander Lazo had pressed her into his small hands and said, “This is your life now, Ti Pous.” Little Thumb, they’d called him, mocking his size. He’d proved them wrong, and now Baltimore’s streets were his proving ground, each kill a defiance of the world that had broken him.

About the Author

 Darrell King Sr.

 Darrell King Sr. has been writing ever since the age of eight. His first
published work of fiction was penned during the fall of 1976 as a student of
Mary Field’s Elementary School on South Carolina’s Daufuskie Island. This
effort was an adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkein’s “The Hobbit,” that he also wrote
and illustrated. It was published in the school’s quarterly periodical, “The
Daufuskie Kid’s Magazine.” Darrell King has written stories and numerous
poems, several of which were published in the 1995-1996 “Poetry Anthology” by
the National Library of Poetry in Owings Mills, Maryland. During the 90s,
Darrell King became inspired by and attracted to the lurid tales of inner city
crime. Dramas he read in novels by great writers such as Donald Goines and
Iceberg Slim captivated his attention. These tales prompted Mr. King to begin
his literary career writing his very own stories of urban crime and inner city
drama. Darrell King is the author of Mack Daddy: Legacy of a Gangsta, Dirty
South ( Triple Crown) and How Do You Want It?(Urban Books) Mo’ Dirty : Still
Stuntin’ (Urban Books) is his latest release and the much anticipated sequel
to Dirty South. Darrell King was raised in South Carolina’s Dufuskie Island.
He now resides in Atlanta with his wife Sandy.

 

Contact Links

 

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Goodreads

 

Purchase Links

 

Amazon

 

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