Erik Gleiberman in The Washington Post:
Trotter forgoes the narrative many readers might expect, an inside account of a career leading to what I consider the most visionary and musically rich act in hip-hop history. Though he briefly explores the high school origins of his creative alchemy with co-frontman Ahmir Thompson (a.k.a. Questlove), Trotter does not discuss a single Roots song. Instead, he’s out to reconstruct his “communally built self,” honoring the many family members who strove to nurture a young man with artistic promise, while their own lives often fell prey to the destructive forces that besieged South Philadelphia in the 1980s and ’90s.
More here.