I lived to tell the story A memoir of love, legacy, and resilience

Tamika D. Mallory

Book - 2025

In I Lived to Tell the Story, Tamika Mallory takes us beyond the headlines and podiums, offering an unfiltered look at the moments that shaped her--not just as an activist but as a woman navigating love, loss, and self-discovery. From her early days as the daughter of civil rights organizers in Harlem to her battles with the personal pain that many never imagined--the trauma of sexual assault, the pressures of motherhood, the fallout of public scrutiny, and the fight to reclaim her peace--this is Tamika as the world has never seen her before.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Black Privilege Publishing/Atria 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Tamika D. Mallory (author)
Edition
First Black Privilege Publishing/Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
v, 290 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982173494
  • Chapter 1. What's Going On
  • Chapter 2. Redemption Song
  • Chapter 3. Fight the Power
  • Chapter 4. Around the Way Girl
  • Chapter 5. A Teenage Love
  • Chapter 6. A Hard Knock Life
  • Chapter 7. When They Reminisce over You
  • Chapter 8. Rosa Parks
  • Chapter 9. To Be Young, Gifted, and Black
  • Chapter 10. I Know I Can
  • Chapter 11. Caught Up in the Rapture
  • Chapter 12. Closer
  • Chapter 13. Unity
  • Chapter 14. Time Today
  • Chapter 15. Change Gonna Come
  • Chapter 16. Lucid Dreams
  • Chapter 17. Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me 'Round
  • Chapter 18. Don't Shoot
  • Chapter 19. Alright
  • Chapter 20. Mercy
  • Epilogue: You Won't Break My Soul
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fighting for a cause. Growing up in Co-op City in New York, Mallory was often in trouble, skipping school, breaking curfew, and dating a series of dangerous men and boys, including "a high-stakes robber." Giving birth to her son Tarique gives her the momentum she needs to start living more responsibly. In an attempt to provide for her child, she takes a job answering phones for a lawyer "in the movement," a job that changes her life. Working her way up the ladder, she eventually becomes executive director of the National Action Network, a group whose rallies she had attended since childhood. As she rises through the ranks, Mallory finds herself co-chairing the Women's March, a decision that exposes her to accusations of antisemitism. The stress of the situation culminates in a trip to rehab, where Mallory overcomes an addiction to pills. She returns to work, this time co-founding an organization called Until Freedom that becomes involved in protests around the killing of Breonna Taylor during the Covid-19 pandemic. By the end of this journey, Mallory learns to care not just for her community but also for herself, concluding, "I was born fighting for freedom and I will die fighting for freedom--but this time freedom will include me." This busy life story is full of passion, vulnerability, and light. At times, the sheer volume of events the author describes eclipses the emotional weight of certain moments. Overall, though, this is a deeply felt account. A Black female activist's gripping memoir. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.