So, let's walk backwards and observe the origin stories of the Black men who came together to battle their personal luggage taken to school with them, called family, and their new battles introduced as they slithered through their collegiate experiences, called growth.
If book one asked the proverbial question, "What do we do with the white people?" Then allow book two to ask a more pungent and intuitive question, "What do we do with the Black people?" When placed in charge, do Black people actually empower and uplift their own, or do they subjugate their own onto a sub-plantation that's just as emotionally and psychologically damaging as the larger plantation on which it sits? Walk the campus with Knowledge and observe his perspective of the HBCU, and just maybe, you'll discover how Black life shaped him into the man you fell in love with, in book one.
Autobiography: King Bell aka Jerome Nyjuan Bell, Sr. is an avid reader. He received his undergrad in Business Administration from Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University in Tallahassee, Florida, in 1999. He would go on to exit the United States Marine Corps after serving ten years and receive his master's in business administration from Averett University in Danville, Virginia, in 2003. Mr. Bell is an Entrepreneur and Real Estate Developer who resides in Fayetteville, North Carolina.