The Hate U Give - A Study in Tupac Shakur - Book Analysis
I wrote this analysis/review as spoiler free as possible but it does contain excerpts from the novel and discusses the book at length. Reading this review will inevitably spoil minor details but purposely tries to avoid any big reveals.
I just finished The Hate U Give, which isnât my usual fair, Â young adult. After reading reviews the premise caught me: a young black woman is with her friend when heâs tragically fatally shot by a trigger happy police officer. From there, it follows Starr Carterâs life between the family dynamics of her father, mother, older half brother, Seven, and younger brother, Sekani.Â
The novel is set in unnamed city other than Starrâs neighborhood of Garden Heights, set in present day.  Other than the âevery townâ setting, itâs meant to exist in our world, where 2pac existed and current rappers Drake, J.Cole, Kendrick Lamar and various other celebrities reside. That said, real events are mostly non-addressed except in closing and Iâd argue for the better.
Only in the closing passages does Starr mention real police shootings, letting the reader explore the parallels without drawing any connection one particular event.
âIt would be easy to quit if it was just about me, Khalil, that night, and that cop. Itâs about way more than that though. Itâs about Seven. Sekani. Kenya. DeVante.
Itâs also about Oscar.
Aiyana.
Trayvon.
Rekia.
Michael.
Eric.
Tamir.
John.
Ezell.
Sandra.
Freddie.
Alton.
Philando.
Itâs even about that little boy in 1955 who nobody recognized at firstâEmmett.â
I didnât know going into this this book was that it draws heavily off Tupac Shakur, to the point of what Iâd dub âTupacianâ. Tupac casts a large shadow over the entire book. Despite how obvious it seems to me, I havenât read any reviews connecting this story directly to Tupac  so hereâs my argument as to how deeply connected the book is to Tupac Shakur.
Iâll fully admit some of the points Iâll make are likely happenstance and/or simply reflective of the realities of racism in America. The phrase âthe black experienceâ exists for a pretty clear reason, the white majority of Americans do not experience America the same as African Americans. Simply by writing a book that deals with racism will overlap with thematic issues covered by Tupac and by an even greater extent, hip hop at large.
That said, whether by conscience choice or simply happenstance, They Hate you Give is a hip hop novel where Tupac Shakurâs work is at the core of the tale, and is deeply entrenched with hip hop references and Tupacian thematic archetypes.
While the archetypes arenât inherently limited to Tupac or even hip hop, but when stacked together, I believe that The Hate U Give affirms a deep study of Tupac and is much a homage to the better aspects of Tupac.Â
Iâm also convinced that The Hate U Give also will be a better 2pac movie than the biopic  after seeing the trailers for All Eyez On Me but thatâs another rant aside.Â
Tupac used as narrative device:
At several key points of the book, Â 2pacâs works are used to both foreshadow and create exposition:
âMind your business, Starr! Donât worry âbout me. Iâm doing what I gotta do.â
âBullshit. You know my dad would help you out.â
He wipes his nose before his lie. âI donât need help from nobody, okay? And that liâl minimum-wage job your pops gave me didnât make nothing happen. I got tired of choosing between lights and food.â
âI thought your grandma was working.â
âShe was. When she got sick, them clowns at the hospital claimed theyâd work with her. Two months later, she wasnât pulling her load on the job, âcause when youâre going through chemo, you canât pull big-ass garbage bins around. They fired her.â He shakes his head. âFunny, huh? The hospital fired her âcause she was sick.â
Itâs silent in the Impala except for Tupac asking who do you believe in? I donât know.
My phone vibrates again, probably either Chris asking for forgiveness or Kenya asking for backup against Denasiaâ
Tupacâs song âWho Do You Believe in?â is a paranoid exploration about psychological toll of urban decay and death.Â
So I'm askin', before I lay me down to sleep
Before you judge me
Look at all the shit you did to me; my misery
- 2pac, Who Do You Believe in
At the beginning of chapter ten, Starr decides to join her dad on errands for his story. During the trip, 2pacâs song, âKeep Your Head Upâ is used as exposition again and mild foreshadowing as Starr struggles with her friendâs death.Â
âIâm always down to hang out with him.
We roll through the streets, Tupac blasting through the subwoofers. Heâs rapping about keeping your head up, and Daddy glances at me as he raps along, like heâs telling me the same thing Tupac is.
âI know youâre fed up, babyââhe nudges my chinââbut keep your head up.â
He sings with the chorus about how things will get easier, and I donât know if I wanna cry âcause thatâs really speaking to me right now, or crack up âcause Daddyâs singing is so horrible.
Daddy says, âThat was a deep dude right there. Real deep. They donât make rappers like that no more.â
âYouâre showing your age, Daddy.â
âWhatever. Itâs the truth. Rappers nowadays only care âbout money, hoes, and clothes.â
âShowing your age,â I whisper.
ââPac rapped âbout that stuff too, yeah, but he also cared âbout uplifting black people,â says Daddy. âLike he took the word âniggaâ and gave it a whole new meaningâNever Ignorant Getting Goals Accomplished. And he said Thug Life meantââ
âThe Hate U Give Little Infants F---s Everybody,â I censor myself. This is my daddy Iâm talking to, you know?
âYou know âbout that?â
âYeah. Khalil told me what he thought it means. We were listening to Tupac right before . . . you know.â
âAâight, so what do you think it means?â
âYou donât know?â I ask.
âI know. I wanna hear what you think.â
Here he goes. Picking my brain. âKhalil said itâs about what society feeds us as youth and how it comes back and bites them later,â I say. âI think itâs about more than youth though. I think itâs about us, period.â
âUs who?â he asks.
âBlack people, minorities, poor people. Everybody at the bottom in society.â
âThe oppressed,â says Daddy.
âYeah. Weâre the ones who get the short end of the stick, but weâre the ones they fear the most. Thatâs why the government targeted the Black Panthers, right? Because they were scared of the Panthers?â
âUh-huh,â Daddy says. âThe Panthers educated and empowered the people. That tactic of empowering the oppressed goes even further back than the Panthers though. Name one.â
Is he serious? He always makes me think. This one takes me a second. âThe slave rebellion of 1831,â I say. âNat Turner empowered and educated other slaves, and it led to one of the biggest slave revolts in history.â
Again, we have the content of Tupacâs song reflected in the story. Below is the hook, literally as her dad is comforting his daughter by trying to normalize her life after the shooting. In his own way, heâs also placing the pivotal title, THUG on the book.
Keep ya head up, ooh, child
Things are gonna get easier
Keep ya head up, ooh, child
Things'll get brighter
Keep ya head up, ooh, child
Things are gonna get easier
Keep ya head up, ooh, child
Things'll get brighter
- 2pac, Keep Your Head Up
When Seven is driving with Chris, Kenya, DeVante, and Starr, after the pivotal moment where DeVante is rescued from an already dangerous situation, Seven realizes his mother helped Chris, Kenya and Starr rescue DeVante. Seven wants to go back to try and get her out of the situation, but Starr sees the futile logic, and tries to reason with Seven not to go back.
2pacâs Changes plays when Seven ultimately is convinced to u-turn and not to go back to Kingâs house and the choice inevitably leads the group to the protests at the end of chapter 24.
âA Tupac song on the radio makes up for our silence. He raps about how we gotta start making changes. Khalil was right. âPacâs still relevant.
âAll right,â Seven says, and he makes another U-turn. âAll right.â
2pacâs Changes is to-date, 2pacâs highest chart topping song, originally released as a B-Side on Brendaâs Got A Baby but re-release on his greatest hits, remixed and remastered to its catchier version that most listeners know today. Changes centrally covers police brutality, racism, the rise of black incarceration, drug dealing, and gang violence, ultimately with 2pac asking listeners to make changes, while over an interpolation of "The Way It Is" by Bruce Hornsby and the Range.  The entire song feels as urgent a quarter century later as it did in 1992 and could be quoted in its entirety.
I see no changes. All I see is racist faces.
Misplaced hate makes disgrace to races we under.
I wonder what it takes to make this one better place...
let's erase the wasted.
Take the evil out the people, they'll be acting right.
'Cause both black and white are smokin' crack tonight.
And only time we chill is when we kill each other.
It takes skill to be real, time to heal each other.
And although it seems heaven sent,
we ain't ready to see a black President, uhh.
It ain't a secret don't conceal the fact...
the penitentiary's packed, and it's filled with blacks.
But some things will never change.
Try to show another way, but they stayin' in the dope game.
Now tell me what's a mother to do?
Bein' real don't appeal to the brother in you.
You gotta operate the easy way.
"I made a G today" But you made it in a sleazy way.
Sellin' crack to the kids. "I gotta get paid,"
Well hey, well that's the way it is.Â
I could spent paragraphs unpackingChanges, but its best simply listened to after reading the book.
Lastly, when Starr finally moves into up into her new room, Tupac is used to reflect on Khalil in the closing of the book.
âMomma leaves with the phone, and I turn onto my side. Tupac stares back at me from a poster, a smirk on his face. The Thug Life tattoo on his stomach looks bolder than the rest of the photo. It was the first thing I put in my new room. Kinda like bringing Khalil with me.
He said Thug Life stood for âThe Hate U Give Little Infants Fucks Everybody.â We did all that stuff last night because we were pissed, and it fucked all of us. Now we have to somehow un-fuck everybody.â
1) Iâll start with the most obvious. The Hate U Give, is âTHUGâ, such a direct reference to 2pac that not one but two characters explain the meaning of 2pacâs love of acrynomistic interpretations of words. Tupac was hardly the first rapper to lift acronyms, as the 5 Percent Nation slang infected hip hop in the late 80s and early 90s. For examples, see any rhyme that involves the phrase Arm Leg Leg Arm Head (Allah) orPete Rock and CL Smoothâs âThey Reminisce Over You, T.R.O.Y.â Â
Tupac once explained Thug Life as âThe Hate U Give Little Infants Fucks Everybodyâ, an exposition of the black experience according to Shakur. Tupac doesnât single out just whites or blacks or any other single sect of society but rather points out the normalization of racism hurts white people as well as black people and any other ethnic group. Itâs a very progressive argument to be made by man in his early 20s back in the early 90s (lest not forget 2pac was another young black man gunned down at 25).
âKhalil drops the brush in the door and cranks up his stereo, blasting an old rap song Daddy has played a million times. I frown. âWhy you always listening to that old stuff?â
âMan, get outta here! Tupac was the truth.â
âYeah, twenty years ago.â
âNah, even now. Like, check this.â He points at me, which means heâs about to go into one of his Khalil philosophical moments. ââPac said Thug Life stood for âThe Hate U Give Little Infants Fucks Everybody.ââ
I raise my eyebrows. âWhat?â
âListen! The Hate Uâthe letter UâGive Little Infants Fucks Everybody. T-H-U-G L-I-F-E. Meaning what society give us as youth, it bites them in the ass when we wild out. Get it?â
âDamn. Yeah.â
âSee? Told you he was relevant.â He nods to the beat and raps along. But now Iâm wondering what heâs doing to âfuck everybody.â As much as I think I know, I hope Iâm wrong. I need to hear it from him.â
2) The second most obvious 2pac reference is both Starr Amaru Carter shares the same middle name of Tupac Amaru Shakur. Also notable is the Starrâs last name is the same as Jay-Z, which also is referenced when Starr jokes about the wishful possibility of being an estranged relative relationship to Jay-Z. The spelling of Starr could be also  taken as homage to Black Star (Mos Def + Talib Kweli) or Gang Starr (Guru + DJ Premier).
Both groups pay homage to fallen rappers, such as on Black Starâs most famous track âDefinitionâ which features the chorus of:
âOne, two, three,
It's kind of dangerous to be an MC,
They shot 2Pac and Biggie,
Too much violence in hip-hop, Y-Oâ
- BlackStar, Definitiona
In the case of Gang Starr, DJ Premier especially being responsible for exposing a wider audience to Big L, or songs like on their classic album Moment of Truth on the song âIn Memory Of...â which calls out a large cast of fallen hip hop pioneers including âPac and Biggie.
Also notable, Mos Def performed Panther Pride as spoken word by 2pac on the tribute album, The Rose That Grew From the Concrete, further deepening the Tupac connection to Black Star.
These are loose tangential connections to Tupac. Even Sean Carter (Jay-Z) was called out as the ring leader of East Coast rappers looking to tarnish 2pacâs namesake on Tupacâs Makalevi album, The Seven Day Theory.
In a more literary sense, Starr literally is the star of the book, akin to over-the-top literary naming conventions like Hiro Protagonist in Neil Stephensonâs classic, âSnow Crashâ.
3) King is a Suge Knight-esq character even described as a physically imposing 300 pound bearded bald man, standing just above 6 feet and always carrying a cigar. Knightâs kingpin image as a villain has become the standard bearer of the evil gang affiliated record exec and the archetype of the hip hop villain, (see Def Jamâs Vendetta/Fight For NY character, D-Mob, or Lucious from Empire) .Â
King isnât a studio exec nor does he manage musicians in the The Hate U Give, but his demeanor is a distilled version of Knight.Â
A laundry list misdeeds have been attributed to Knight and his cronies. Many fans of 2pac believe that Suge Knight orchestrated the hit on 2pac in Las Vegas. Lead Investigator of the Christopher Wallace murder, Russel Poole, believes that Suge Knight was behind the murder of the Notorious Big. Â
4) Colors play a part in the gang culture, grey and green are substituted for the real life crips and blood affiliations, a throwback to colors and gang life of the early 90s. Tupac often referenced M.O.B., Money Over Bitches but for those who knew Suge, Â M.O.B. was a menacing endorsement of the Mob Piru Bloods. The divisions of even the same gangs by regionality like the divisions of Bloods are reflected as King Lords has divisions within the same gang, akin to the world that Tupac lived in. Notably the reality of gang life isnât unique to only 2pac but the the dedication to gang colors was originally a west coast phenomenon but spread.
NYC underground legend, OC (of the D.I.T.C.)âs Memory Lane  illustrates the division of New York vs Los Angeles in the 80s.
I recall one of my cousins goin out to California
Cominâ back tellin us niggas dyin over colors
He told me 'bout, khaki wearin, jheri curl brothers
Doinâ drivebys in cars with machine guns bustinâ
I found it farfetched, thinkin his story is stretched
Findinâ out later on about the West coast sets
Let me fast-forward the story and tell ya how it ends
They moved to start a new life for his life to end
Come to find out later on he was Blood inducted
From the same set he claimed was the Blood who bucked him
- OC, Memory Lane*
The link has the track label mislabeled.
5) Sevenâs name toys with the numerological side of hip hop.
I rarely-to-never put credence into numerology or anagrams as both are logical fallacies as it flirts with enthymemes and is an exercise in confirmation bias.Â
Most of the post-humorous â2pac is aliveâ theories had to do with seriously large jumps like âMakaveli = Mak aliveâ. I could easily connect the number to 2pac.
Example:  Seven isnât exactly limited to any one sect of western society due to its prevalence as a âluckyâ number but 2pacâs Makaveli - The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory, has seven in the title. Seven also happens (more coincidence than anything) to be the number of official 2pacâs post humorous albums.
While many theories circulate around the meaning of the Makaveli albumâs title, quite literally the album was recorded a single week, hence the âSeven Day Theory.â In the context of a Tupanian world and as someone familiar with the importance of numerology among 2pac fans, Iâd argue that simply using a number (any low digit number) would allow fans to make tangential claims about said number. This logical fallacy is known as âAttempts by gamblers to see patterns in random chanceâ, where coincidence is chalked up to some convoluted pattern, that often requires significant hurdles to arrive at.
While Iâd wager that Sevenâs name isnât a direct reference to 2pac, I can see Angie Thomas toying with the reader, looking to make numerological connections to any (bad pun) number of things as numerology factored quite a bit into post-humorous Tupac conspiracies.
6) Big Mav, aka Maverick, Starrâs father, is constantly tending roses in his garden (and talking to them) despite being a fairly traditionally masculine character. The affinity with roses is shared with 2pac. 2pacâs autobiographical poem is âThe Rose That Grew From the Concreteâ which also is the name of his collected publication of his poetry.  âMama's Just A Little Girlâ andâ I Ain't Mad at Chaâ both feature the iconography of roses pertaining as a metaphor for raising children in the urban ghettos.  Big Mav struggle to raise roses in his urban environment is an allegory for his own careful attention to Starr (and all his children). Roses to my knowledge, are the only flower ever mentioned by variety in any 2pac song.
7) Khalil is potentially named after the actor that played in Juice, one of Tupacâs best friends, Raheem. Raheem is shot dead by Tupacâs character. While there isnât a greater metaphor here, Tupacâs portrayal of Bishop, the antagonist in the film is widely regarded as Tupacâs defining film role, and a center of Tupacian lore as its his first film role. As the story goes, he landed it on an impromptu reading while hanging out with Treach of Naughty By Nature.
Also, police violence towards young black men is central to the Tupacian universe. This shouldnât come as any surprise as Tupac confronted the reality of  growing up as black male from a very early age.
Cops give a damn about a negro
Pull the trigger, kill a nigga, he's a hero
Mo' nigga, mo' nigga, mo' niggas
Rather I'd be dead than a po' nigga
Let the Lord judge the criminals
If I die, I wonder if Heaven got a ghetto
- 2pac, I Wonder if Head Got a Ghetto
8) ) Golden Era references are aplomb in this book. For those unfamiliar, the Golden Era is usually cited as roughly between 1987-1995, marking the rapid rise of hip hop in public conscience era and of the most rapid evolution of hip hop in both lyricism, and production. While the exact years are often debated,  the golden era is never extended beyond the deaths of 2pac and Biggie in 1996.  The throwback references are largely to cultural references that existed when 2pac was alive. The obsession with Jordans is a 90s sneaker head theme. Shoe fetishism has been deeply entrenched with hip hop, especially in the indie rap scene as of today. This could easily be a book worth, but Jordan represents the shift from Adidas to Nike, which happened during the Golden Era.. While Tupac wasnât explicitly a sneaker head, fans and publications have noted Tupac wearing Jordans.
More indicative of the throwback references, are with Starr and Chrisâs obsession of Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Jordans, and references to NWA and the movie Friday. Notably, Fresh Prince of Bel-Air is set in the in LA, NWA is from LA, and Friday is a movie set in LA. 2pac is most closely associated with Los Angeles despite being from NYC and also residing in Oakland.
DeVante is named after DeVante Swing, directly referenced to 90s RnB group, Jodaci, DeVante Swing even produced a song for Tupac, although not really affiliated. For a bit of unrelated trivia, Jodaci is where Sean âPuffyâ Combs got his start in the music business as his first major act to break. Puff Daddy (as he was known) is a central figure in 2pacâs beef with the Biggie.
Lastly, even the phraseâ Westside is the best sideâ uttered in the book, and is a throwback reference to the West vs East hip hop beef, prominently between Tupac and Biggie and whoever else Tupac threw under the bus in diss records (Nas, Jay-Z, Mobb Deep and even The Fugees).
9) Starrâs childhood friend, Natasha, died of gang violence. Tupac often recorded odes to fallen friends, most notably Kato who died of gang violence whoâs referenced in lyrics on âHow Long With they Mourn Meâ, âSo Many Tearsâ, âReady For Whatever, âOnly Fear of Deathâ, âWhere do we go from hereâ, âBallad of a Dead Souljaâ, âLife Goes Onâ and âWhite Manâz Worldâ. While the repercussions of gang violence is hardly new territory for hip hop, it follows the Tupacian thematic tone. This may be grasping at straws Natashaâs death reads quite a bit like Tupacâs description of  Latasha mentioned in âHellrazorâ.
Dear Lord if ya hear me, tell me why
Little girl like LaTasha, had to die
She never got to see the bullet, just heard the shot
Her little body couldn't take it, it shook and dropped
And when I saw it on the news how she bucked the girl, killed Latasha
Now I'm screamin fuck the world,
Notably, The real LaTasha Harlins was shot when a store manager assumed LaTasha was stealing liquor and a conflict arose where Latasha was shot, in the back of the head, attempting to leave.
10) The reactions to the police verdict result in a full blown riot resembling the the LA riots in depth and scope. This is as much about today as it is thematically 2pac. Tupac several times references rioting, (as the LA riots happened in April 29, 1992 - May 4, 1992.
First you didn't give a fuck, but you're learnin now
If you don't respect the town then we'll burn you down
God damn it's a motherfuckin riot
Black people only hate police so don't try it
If you're not from the town then don't pass through
Cause some O.G. fools might blast you
- 2pac, I Wonder if Head Got a Ghetto
I must reiterate that this alone isnât inherently Tupacian as the LA Riots have had a long standing hold the public conscience, and any riots resulting from unfavorable outcomes circulating police brutality automatically welcome a comparison to the LA Riots.
While Iâm sure thereâs other relationships other readers can make connections to 2pac, these were the most easily recognized for me.
Recommended listening from 2pac:
I Wonder if Heaven Got A Ghetto*
Until the End of Time (RP Remix)
*I Wonder If Heaven Got A Ghetto borrows several lines from Changes (or vice versa) as Changes was originally a B-Side that was never released on an album. The remix I Wonder If Heaven Got A Ghetto I personally likeÂ