The debut novel of Quntos KunQuest, an inmate at the infamous Louisiana State Penitentiary-better known as Angola. This story reveals the inner lives and daily frustrations of the inmates at Angola, told in a voice-a flow-that is at turns enraged, insightful, cutting, soulful, and poetic.
PRAISE FOR THIS LIFE:
"KunQuest's searing debut depicts a man's unrelentingly brutal life in the U.S. prison system. . . . Using an effective experimental combination of prose and rap lyrics, KunQuest brilliantly captures the cadence and rhythm of prison. Confident and unrelenting, this one hits hard." —Publishers Weekly, starred review
"The characters may be suffering from mental, physical, and psychological violence of long-term imprisonment, but they find solace and complex relationships in community and art. An effective philosophical novel that uses hip-hop to tell a story of prison life and how rhyme can lead to redemption." —Kirkus Reviews
"KunQuest offers a full and precise portrait of prison life, from daily mundane rituals to the dynamics of relationships, philosophical musings, legal pitfalls, and the psychological turmoil experienced by individuals imprisoned for life." —Booklist
"What a gripping, evocative novel This Life is. Quntos KunQuest has given us an intimate, human, insightful tale that calls for action even as it claims self-acceptance. It's one hell of a debut." —Jami Attenberg, author of All This Could Be Yours
"This Life is jolty, rhythmic, sometimes very funny, sermonizing and chopped: it is also beautiful. Quntos KunQuest has dreamed up, and molded, hammered, and shaped, a new mode of fiction: American, and poetic, and wonderfully free." —Rachel Kushner, author of The Mars Room
"Quntos KunQuest is such an original voice. His spirited prose and evocative storytelling will both knock you off balance and pull you in. In the end This Life is about what it means to be human in the most inhumane of places." —Alex Kotlowitz, author of An American Summer and There Are No Children Here
"This brilliant novel comes to us written in the secret and perfect language of those who are left behind walls to evolve from a very young age: brotherly love is the code, self-realization is the goal, unending hope is the sorrow. I love this book so much. I can't imagine why it has taken so long for the true genre of prison writing to arrive."—Deb Olin Unferth, author of Barn 8