Book One ended with a decision.
This book asks what that decision actually costs.
What does a man owe the world after he survives himself? And why do some of us find a way out of what we come from — while others never do?
These are not comfortable questions. They don't have clean answers. But they are the questions Deon Williams has been living with since he watched people he grew up alongside go left permanently while he pulled back. Since he lost a friend not to the streets but to the silence inside them. Since he understood that survival without purpose is just a longer way of disappearing.
Between Retribution and Grace is the second book in a trilogy that began as personal testimony and widens here into something larger — a cultural and political examination of the forces that determine which lives get to move forward and which ones don't.
Drawing on the structural clarity of Fred Hampton, the cultural expression of Bob Marley, and the moral framework of scripture, Williams builds a philosophical triangle that holds personal accountability and systemic critique simultaneously — refusing to let either one off the hook.
This is not a book about blame.
It is a book about understanding.
About what it means to step outside the managed argument entirely and ask what the game actually is.
About why the man who makes it out owes something to the ones who didn't.
And about what grace actually looks like when it's offered not because it's been earned but because something in you refuses to let the fracture be the final word.
Between retribution and grace is where most men who came from what he came from actually live.
This book is for them.
We publiceren alleen reviews die voldoen aan de voorwaarden voor reviews. Bekijk onze voorwaarden voor reviews.