It feels like the Wu-Tang Clan has been around forever, and their rise to fame is certainly a well-documented one.
Between group member autobiographies (RZA’s Wu-Tang Manual and The Tao of Wu, U-God’s Raw, Buddah Monk’s ODB The Dirty Version, Raekwon’s From Staircase to Stage) and documentaries (Showtime’s Wu-Tang Clan: Of Mics and Men and Hulu’s Wu-Tang: An American Saga) it might be assumed that every angle of the Clan’s story has been examined. The epic From the Streets of Shaolin: The Wu-Tang Saga (Hachette Books) proves that is decidedly not the case.
(Credit: Alice Arnold)
Billed as “the most three-dimensional portrait of Wu-Tang to date,” this revelatory book
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