• Bestselling author Dapharoah69

    http://www.tagged.com/kingoferotica

    35819 times

    Blue Digital Wave

    I'm bestselling author Dapharoah69. My Books 1 thr 10 are now on sale on BN.com & Amazon.com.

    June 25, 2009

     

    Male

    Black/African

    Christian

    Bi

     

    Southwood Middle School

    Miami Southridge Senior High School '95

  • About Me

    • Anything Janet Jackson. Been a fan for 25 plus years. Beyawnsay and CiError cant compare

    • The Color Purple. Poetic Justice.

    • Fresh Prince. A Different World. Good Times

    • Sistah Souljajh, RL Davis. Zane. Ty B Moore. Langston Hughes. Maya Angelou. TuPac. Ancient Egypt, Nefertiti, Akhenaton and Queen Hatshepsut.

    • Miami Dolphins. Miami Heat. Florida Marlins. Florida Panthers. Miami Hurricanes.

    • Writing. Dancing

    • To cook dinner for God and wash the dishes after he feeds the hungry. To be a household name with my books.

    • My majestic eyes. My heart. My soul. The bend of my lips. The curl of my toes when I orgasm.

    • In January of 2008, he unveiled his first book, The King of Erotica: The Throne, a collection of unapologetic sexual short stories with a message, under the T.K.O.E. Publications imprint (owned by Dapharoah69) and co-run by his nieces Aliyaih and Sunjaraih Hernandez-Wilson, ages 8 and 6. He promoted his works by foot on Miami, Florida's South Beach and the sub cities in between. The book was reviewed by Naiomi Pitre, author of "Broken Vows." He was interviewed by Sheri Elfman and featured in the Express Newspaper, interviewed on MySpace's Blog Radio Show by actor/author Lamont Carey (Def Jam Poetry, The Wire) with high ratings and interviewed by Dewey Edwards on GBMNews. His books won over old and new fans and was the focal point for more than 45 Book Clubs across the country. Dapharoah69 admits that some of the characters, written from the male and female points of view, bare similarities of himself. His writing gives a deeper understanding of why some people have the type of sex the way they do. The book also touches on taboo topics seldom discussed in the black community.

    •