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Only God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakur

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New York Times bestselling author Jeff Pearlman turns his sharp eye and meticulous storytelling to one of pop culture’s most enduring and enigmatic figures—Tupac Shakur—presenting the definitive retelling of his life, complete with explosive new details. 

Scrutinized in life, mythologized in death, Tupac Shakur remains a subject of immense cultural significance and speculation nearly thirty years after his murder. Despite a multitude of books, documentaries, and even a feature film, much about Tupac’s story remains shrouded and misunderstood. Like many icons who died tragically young, Tupac the man has long been obscured—his edges sanded down, his complexity numbed—by the competing agendas that surround his legacy.

In Only God Can Judge Me, accomplished biographer and cultural historian Jeff Pearlman tackles his most nuanced subject, telling the definitive story of Tupac Shakur in unprecedented depth. In this authoritative look at Tupac’s life, Pearlman skillfully recreates West Coast hip hop in all its glory, going inside Death Row Records and on the sets of movies like Juice and Poetic Justice to offer the most clear-eyed rendering to date of the man who still casts a shadow over modern hip hop. But more than just a biography of a complicated figure, Only God Can Judge Me also captures the time and place in which Tupac rose, a singular moment in music history when West Coast hip hop became a phenomenon and transformed popular music.

Featuring nearly seven hundred original interviews and never-before-published details from every corner of Tupac’s life, the result offers a truly singular portrait of one of modern pop culture’s most towering figures.  Guided by the voices of those who knew and lived life alongside him, Only God Can Judge Me captures the layers of a man who, even thirty years after his death, remains as elusive as ever. 

464 pages, Hardcover

Published October 21, 2025

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About the author

Jeff Pearlman

18 books552 followers
Jeff Pearlman is an American sportswriter. He has written nine books that have appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list: four about football, three on baseball and two about basketball. He authored the 1999 John Rocker interview in Sports Illustrated.

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5 stars
126 (64%)
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53 (27%)
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8 (4%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 60 reviews
Profile Image for Eddie S..
105 reviews13 followers
October 23, 2025
I was twelve years old when Tupac died. I’m about to turn forty-two, and somehow we’re still talking about him — and after reading Jeff Pearlman’s Only God Can Judge Me, I understand why.

Pearlman doesn’t write this like a gossip book. He writes it like a psychological study of a man who built a myth so powerful it swallowed him whole. Tupac wasn’t just living life — he was performing identity. You see him constantly shifting — around Suge Knight, he’s one person; when Suge leaves, another. It’s not schizophrenia, it’s survival. He built the “Thug Life” persona as both armor and advertisement, a brand that sold records and protected him, but also boxed him in.

What I love is how Pearlman doesn’t sanitize it. He shows the side that most people ignore — the impulsive, self-destructive side that kept putting him in danger. And here’s where I push back a bit: the author says Tupac wasn’t a thug, but if you’ve grown up seeing people crash out, throw their lives away over ego or impulse, you know that is thug behavior — not because they’re evil, but because they’re lost and reacting to environments that reward hardness over vulnerability.

This book made me feel like I was finally reading about the real Tupac — not the legend, not the mural, but the man. The contradictions, the genius, the emotional hunger, the need for love that fame could never satisfy. It’s haunting, it’s human, and it’s one of the best biographies I’ve ever read.
Profile Image for Sierra| HooksxBooks.
310 reviews18 followers
September 29, 2025
Whew, Only God Can Judge Me.

This has to be the most detailed and best biography I've ever listened to. Pearlman, went deep in the trenches to dig up the truth about Tupac's true upbringing - the good, the bad and the (real) ugly. I was 6 years old when Tupac died, I remember watching the people around me grieve, and I mean GREIVE this man. I remember dancing to his music, watching him on tv in movies that I shouldn't have been watching back then. I knew who he was, but his impact became what it was AFTER death.

Listening to this biography, and learning about who he really was, how he grew up and what his life was like. It gave me a perspective of Tupac that was different than what he portrayed himself to be. There were so many moments in Only God Can Judge Me where my jaw dropped, Learning more about Afeni and her drug habit. Tupac growing up without his father. Tupac and his sister having a strained relationship. The backstory to the Biggie and Tupac beef - tidbits I've never heard before.

Only God Can Judge Me truly showed Tupac as he was. Even down to the violence, his unstable mental health, the charges due to SA towards women and the strain with his family and friends. He carried a lot of weight on his shoulders and lashed out in ways that carried major consequences.

Kudos to Jeff Pearlman. You truly put the work in to find all of the right people to bring this biography to life. They brought the realness and the rawness that was needed for this to be the 5 star listen that it was. I enjoyed the narrator, James Shippy and his ability to code switch. He was able to narrate and give professionalism for the "essay like" portions and have the proper cadence and flow when it came to the lyrics, the AAVE, the lingo. It was enjoyable.

I plan on purchasing a hard copy of this book for my home. This is a coffee table book for sure.

I received a copy of this audio ARC from NetGalley.
Profile Image for Samuel.
107 reviews27 followers
November 6, 2025
tone-deaf writing at times but I did learn a lot about Tupac Amaru Shakur.
Profile Image for Brandys_bookography.
161 reviews9 followers
October 5, 2025
I had to sit on this one for a few. I was one of those teenagers that grieved when Tupac was murdered. I was devastated by the prospect of him not being there anymore to use his lyrics to open your eyes to things that you may have not noticed or known about. Yes, not all of his songs were prophetic but there were a lot that was.

This book both written and audio was one of the best biographies that I know of telling Tupac's story. There were so many moments in his youth that really showcased how he because the man that he was. His life was not easy but he had skills and an unwavering belief in himself. Sure, he did not always make the right choice and was hot headed but you can understand his pain through memories of his classmates and the other people that was close to him throughout his too short life.

You get a real and deeply moving story of his childhood, where he lived and the unique tastes in books and music that he had. As someone who loved Tupac, there was a lit that I didn’t know. Some of it was troubling and some was just moments that you know even with all the poverty and trouble in his life that he lived for those moments. From performing in plays to reading a new Shakespeare book. Tupac had depth to him that makes you understand some of the stories he told through his lyrics.

James Shippy did a great job on the narration of this book. He was able to bring some of the emotion to statements made in this story. I cannot recommend this book enough. I will absolute have to get my own print copy of this because it just deserves to be mixed in with some of my other favorite reads.

Thank you NetGalley, Mariner Books, and HarperAudio Adult for allowing me to read and listen to this story early. All of my opinions are my own.
Profile Image for M..
17 reviews
September 13, 2025
Wow! What a well-researched gift I have in my hands. I was lucky enough to win an ARC from the publishers and feel good about this being shared with the world. I am a longtime fan of Tupac; his music, his poetry, his films. You know, when people die, we like to turn them into Gods. This book shows the very human side to the man who left us too soon. He was talented, beautiful, and wise beyond his years. He was also flawed, with a dark side, and made some stupid decisions. I would recommend this book to any Tupac fan, but I would also recommend this to anyone who appreciates realness - good and bad. You don't have to know or be a fan of Tupac's work to appreciate his story, though it helps to connect, I think, on a more emotional level. I most certainly cried at the end. I will leave a quote from Pac's sister, Set Shakur, which really got me 😭

"My brother died feeling alone. He died with the world on his shoulders, unable to ever take a break. He couldn't rest because there were no saviors for him. There was no protection for him. There was no big cousin to guide him. There was no best friends. There were no safe harbors. He was so popular, but so alone."

thank you so much to Goodreads and @mariner @harpercollins for this ARC
I give this 5 full 🌟 stars to Jeff Pearlman's hard work.
Profile Image for Nikki Lee.
583 reviews508 followers
November 15, 2025
🎤 narrator - James Shippy
🕦 16 hrs 48 min

Wow! Jeff Pearman really did his research on this one! He must have dug through the trenches for all of these details. Bravo Mr. Pearlman!

You must be from another planet if you haven’t heard of Tupac. Seriously. I’ll be honest here and admit there was so much information that I did not know.

We get a good look at Tupac’s adolescent years, his start to fame, his controversial rap.e accusations, his love for women, family and friends, and, ultimately, his death.

I learned so much from this biography! He could be known as a hot head, especially when it came to his image and friends. He loved women so much that he didn’t even go without while being in prison. They were brought to him. His mother was a part of the black panthers. Pac also accidentally shot himself in the balls. He had a sexual relationship with Madonna. Yep! Brenda’s Got A Baby is based on a real baby.

Tupac was murdered on September 13, 1996 hours after he beat down a South Side Compton Crip. He was 25 years old. I was only 19. I will never forget that moment.

The narration by James Shippy was great. As always with memoirs and biographies, it’s easiest to follow along via audiobook. Everything was crisp and clear and I never felt bored.

If you’re a fan of biographies and memoirs…. Especially the controversial ones that leave your jaw on the ground…..Give this a read/ listen!

5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Sabrina Flanagan.
42 reviews6 followers
November 6, 2025
4.5 STARS

I have seen many documentaries and read countless articles on Tupac, yet in this book I still found myself learning a great deal about his life. Jeff Pearlman had me sucked in from the beginning with his conversational tone and writing style. We walked alongside Tupac as his life was written out before us from beginning to end. Every chapter had a significant amount of quotes and interviews from people who recounted their experiences and past with Tupac. It painted a greater picture of who he was and how he came to be. He was a complicated boy and man who had a lifetime of struggle. He was more complex than many know him to be outside of his rap career. Pearlman accomplished what I can assume to be as close to a complete picture of Tupac as anyone could by deep diving into his early life, personal life, and career. This book was well researched and was created from years of dedication. Thanks to Pearlman, I feel this is the closest I’ve ever come to understanding one of America’s most notoriously known rappers in history. If you are a fan or even remotely curious of Tupac Shakur, I highly recommend you give this a read.
Profile Image for Tanya.
405 reviews
October 21, 2025
I think it's always interesting to read a biography about a celebrity through another perspective. This one was a good example of that. The detail, depth and research put into this book was impressive and I enjoyed the storytelling aspect of it. I grew up being intrigued by Tupac because he had a noise piercing and because he rapped with such passion that you couldn't not listen to his songs. I knew most of his career highlights through my husband (Big Tupac fan) and biopics I watched but this book focused heavily on what lead to his existence.

It was enlightening to learn about his mother and her background for the first third of the book and then transitioning to his childhood, his time at BSA for theater, ballet and arts, and then finally getting into the rap game. The details tied in to famous moments and events was what kept me fascinated with this one and told Tupac's story with an emotion we will always be curious about for the truth. By the end, I felt a new appreciation for Tupac or perhaps new empathy for a young life gone too soon.

I know nothing about Jeff Pearlman but I did appreciate the immense research he went after for this book. The amount of people he interviewed and the digging that was done to articulate this story was clear in the delivery of this biography. Kudos to the narrator James Shippy because it was eloquently narrated, whether it was switching to verse or slang, he did it seamlessly without taking away the story's focus.

Special thanks to Harper Audio and Mariner Books for providing an ALC in exchange for my honest opinions.
2 reviews
October 15, 2025
The author said on a podcast that Tupac couldn’t fight or shoot a gun, that makes me question what angle the white author was playing, and what is actually factual in this book.

Napoleon from the Outlawz, Tupac’s aunt, rapper Shock G, and Snoop Dogg all said he could shoot. We have videos of him at a gun range. There was literally a trial about him shooting cops. K Solo and Kurupt talked about Tupac fighting,

Tupac grew up around Black Panther Party members. A man raised around revolutionary violence who had a sensitive and poetic side, but also involved in gangster rap.

Staci Robinson, who met Tupac when they were young, released a biography on Tupac last year that his estate gave permission to, not sure why this was needed.
Profile Image for Meaghan.
251 reviews
October 31, 2025
My overall takeaway - what a sad, hard life. I wonder if he ever had real peace? It doesn’t sound like it. We know now that trauma in childhood changes the brain, changes people and impacts their lives so deeply - that is glaringly obvious here. The idea that Pearlman interviewed over 700 people for this book is crazy! And yet comes through in his writing. For such a short life, Pearlman covers all of it. Tupac is such a figure in our cultural zeitgeist - he’s been dead for 20+ years but STILL present in rap/hiphop. It makes you wonder how he would have continued the game if he’d lived.

I don’t think Biggie had anything to do with it.
Profile Image for Aaron Hicks.
95 reviews
October 28, 2025
After decades of posthumous music, documentaries, literature, and accounts of his life, what more is there to say regarding the biggest rapper of all time?

A LOT!

This book follows the regular biography structure starting with birth, adolescence, and progresses all the way to Tupac’s adult years, death, and the life after it. But this offers new perspective through hundreds of interviews with classmates, family, and more!

What I really like about this book is how Pearlman does not shy away from the more controversial aspects of Pac’s life. Jeff finds the balance of admiration and condemnation, both praising the rapper and his influence while not ignoring his faults/weaknesses.

Pearlman took on the test of writing a fresh, dense 2pac book in 2025 and passed easily.
Profile Image for Stacy.
65 reviews
October 21, 2025
Jeff Pearlman’s Only God Can Judge Me is a stunning, deeply human portrait of Tupac Shakur. Not just the legend, but the man behind the myth. With his trademark blend of fearless reporting and compassion, Pearlman delivers a biography that feels alive, honest, and impossible to put down.

This isn’t just another retelling of Tupac’s rise and fall. It’s an exploration of art, anger, genius, and contradiction. Pearlman captures Tupac’s brilliance and flaws with such nuance that you walk away feeling like you’ve truly met him. The research is impeccable, the pacing electric, and the storytelling cinematic.

Every page pulses with emotion and truth. From Tupac’s early days of hope to the chaos of fame and the tragedy that followed. Pearlman honors his subject without mythologizing him, offering a raw, empathetic look at a man who changed culture forever.

🔥 Verdict: 5🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
A masterpiece of biography and cultural journalism. Only God Can Judge Me isn’t just about Tupac. It’s about America, art, and the enduring struggle to be seen and understood. Absolutely unmissable.
Profile Image for Jack Hayward.
3 reviews
August 6, 2025
Thanks to Goodreads for the advanced copy I won in their giveaway. Jeff Pearlman is the greatest nonfiction writer of this era in my opinion, no one attacks the story harder than Jeff. What an amazing read and captivating that explored everything about Tupac. Everytime I read an underwhelming book or am in a reading rut, I look for a Jeff Pearlman book. Not many non fiction authors are hilarious, detail-oriented, and eccentric as Jeff. The man puts in 100’s of interviews per book. I’ve yet to read a mid book by Jeff and I believe he fully exceeded my expectations in his shift in genre and his first non sports book!
Profile Image for Valerie .
328 reviews8 followers
September 29, 2025
4.25⭐

As a person born in the mid 80s, I was a huge Tupac fan as a kid and I remember the news coverage of his death vividly. However, this book showed me how little I really knew about the life Tupac lived before he died at 25.

Pearlman doesn't shy away from the unsavory and negative aspects of Tupac's life instead of giving a sanitized account. Learning more of how Tupac treated women was tough to swallow, but Pearlman did mention the dichotomy at play between the songs he wrote to empower women and his behavior behind closed doors. There is a fair amount of misogyny and discussion of sexual assault, so be aware before jumping in. 

The mini deep dive on Suge Knights early life was not expected, but I think it did shed a lot of light on how it helped explain who Suge became when he gained power through Death Row. 

This book was obviously well researched and Pearlman obviously respects Tupac Shakur. I'm not sure if him mentioning he might believe Tupac isn't really dead was truly needed though. Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review. 
Profile Image for Anniee Bee.
Author 49 books15 followers
June 20, 2025
Book Review – Only God Can Judge Me by Jeff Pearlman
⭐️⭐️⭐️ (3/5)

Thank you to NetGalley for the opportunity to read this early.

Only God Can Judge Me offers a detailed, well-researched look into Tupac Shakur’s life—from his rise in music and acting to the chaos surrounding Death Row and his untimely death. Jeff Pearlman clearly put in the work, and it shows in the depth of interviews and insight.

While I appreciated the thoroughness, the book didn’t fully pull me in. It felt more like a report than a story at times, and I found myself wanting more emotional connection or narrative flow. Still, for fans of Tupac or hip-hop history, there’s value here.
Profile Image for John Kerth.
4 reviews
July 22, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley for an ARC of this book.

I've read several of Jeff Pearlman's previous books and, as his first non-sports biography, this was right up there with the best of them. Pearlman covered Tupac Shakur without rose-tinted glasses, painting a vivid picture of a brilliant yet troubled artist. Look past the headlines and sensationalist stories and you find a talented but flawed man who just didn't seem to know who he was.
Profile Image for RICK "SHAQ" GOLDSTEIN.
757 reviews13 followers
November 12, 2025
RICK “SHAQ” GOLDSTEIN SAYS:”TUPAC WAS NOT A THUG… AND WASN’T MANY OTHER THINGS HE PROFESSED TO BE… AND THE RESEARCH IN THIS BOOK… SADLY MAKES THE POINT CLEAR AS DAY.”

REAL NAME: PARISH LESANE CROOKS
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“YOU THINK YOU KNOW MY BROTHER? YOU THINK YOU UNDERSTAND HIM? REALLY! MY BROTHER DIDN’T DIE HAPPY. HE DIED ALONE. (SET SHAKUR 3/14/24, NEW ORLEANS)
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During the last quarter-of-a-century… I have read innumerable books on famed rapper… actor… poet… sexual-deviant-rapist… Tupac Shakur… but about five years ago I stopped. For the very reason that I had always made the following comments to my friends… family… and to the audience that faithfully follows my book reviews over the past decades… when I used to always say that… it seems like every other week there’s a new book released on Abraham Lincoln… or Muhammad Ali… and as far as I can tell… neither of them have done anything new in a whole lot of years!

So… why would I buy this book and invest my time… as well as my money on another Tupac book after previously disowning any interest in doing such a thing? Because when I saw that the author Jeff Pearlman was releasing a book on Pac… I stopped in my tracks… and said WHOAAAA! Jeff Pearlman is one of my favorite living sports biographers. I’ve read countless Pearlman biographical classics… including… but not limited to… Walter Payton… Bo Jackson… Brett Favre… Roger Clemens… The Showtime Lakers… Dallas Cowboys… and others. In addition to Jeff’s natural writing style… what really stood out in all those books… that put him head and shoulders… above untold amounts of writers… were two main dogged traits… first his interviewing style… both no-holds-barred-questioning… that would make Sherlock Holmes… seem like a mere malingerer… and Lieutenant Columbo… seem like a meager school girl afraid to ask a question. Additionally… one paragraph might lift his subject to the top of Mount Olympus… standing shoulder to should with holy G-ds… while the next paragraph… might rip the aforementioned subject to shreds… and the scalding truth may be so demeaningly perverse… the reader will want to wash their hands both physically… and emotionally… to disown any previous admiration for the subject.

That is why I took a stab at anther Tupac book… and it was definitely the right decision. Tupac… though an industry changing lyricist… and entertainer… was also a charlatan to himself and others. All the people close to him… from his agent… to his family… to his “supposed” friends… all were shocked… when he got *THUG LIFE* tattooed on his stomach… simply put… he was as far from being a Thug as is humanly possible!

“TUPAC MARVELED AT THE REAL THUGS (GANGBANGERS, DRUG DEALERS) WHILE KNOWING HE WASN’T OF THEIR ILK. REAL THUGS DIDN’T LISTEN TO KATE BUSH.”
“HE WAS ALWAYS TRYING SO HARD TO SOUND LIKE HE WAS FROM CALI, ACTING LIKE A GANGBANGER. BRO, YOU’RE NO GANGBANGER. YOU WENT TO ART SCHOOL. AND HE HAD TWENTY THUMBS AND TWO LEFT FEET WHEN IT CAME TO SPORTS. THIS WAS A BASKETBALL MOVIE (REBOUND). TUPAC SHOOTING A BASKETBALL… HE WOULDN’T EVEN DO THAT SHIT TWICE WITH US BECAUSE HE JUST LOOKED TOO CORNY.”


Throughout Pac’s life he made one bad decision after another… without ever thinking anything through… even the decision that led to his murder.

This is not a book for young readers… nor a book for people who don’t want to read about detailed stories about illegal deviant sexual behavior. Pac was a rapist… and among many contradictions to his outward persona… regarding songs like *KEEP YA HEAD UP”… he treated women with disdain… calling them “bitches” initiating and participating in gang bangs. The hypocrisy of the song *DEAR MAMA”… is spewed from cover to cover… she was never there when he really needed her… she was addicted to crack… LSD… weed… cigarettes… he was constantly embarrassed by her… and lack of care for his sister… as well as himself…

“HE SAID HE DREAMED OF HIS MOTHER SUFFERING A DEEP, INTENSE PAIN, AND THAT THE PREVIOUS NIGHT HE PUNCHED HIS BEDROOM WALL UNTIL HIS HANDS WERE NUMB. I INTEND TO GIVE HER THE COLDEST SHOULDER SHE’S EVER SEEN AND MAKE HER LIFE AS MISERABLE AS SHE’S MADE MINE.”

He’d almost always carry around a notebook and be writing down lyrics… and over the years became the most prolific recorder anyone has ever seen… as he became an actor… with some good reviews… behind the scenes he brought nothing but havoc… disarray to every movie’s set… by never being on time… being drunk and or out of control high… or both. And his deserved reputation became so bad no one wanted to hire him. While filming Poetic Justice with Janet Jackson… Janet called in one of the producers… Steve Nicolaides (Steve was one of my best friends in Junior High and High School… and a baseball teammate,) … Janet was supposed to film a romantic scene with Pac… but told Nicolaides… “AND I DON’T WANT TO SWAP SALIVA WITH HIM UNTIL I’M REALLY SURE HE’S HEALTHY AND CLEAN.” Steve went to Pac and said… “I’LL JUST SPIT THIS OUT TO YOU, MAN, JANET WANTS YOU TO HAVE AN AIDS TEST BEFORE YOU KISS HER.” “HELL NO TUPAC REPLIED”.

Though Pac truly had a sad… lonely… “poet’s… heart… buried deep within his diminutive heart… along with many effeminate features that are discussed by many interviewed in this book… and though… he so ached… for a real close loving family… and unfortunately… he went to his grave… without ever truly getting to experience… what so many people in this world take for granted.

Almost thirty-years later… all the people still living who were associated with Shakur that were interviewed for this book… unanimously echoed that Pac’s main... negative character trait was that he made decisions without thinking them through… and again… he was no veritable thug…

And on September 7, 1996 a few hours before the Mike Tyson – Bruce Seldon WBC Heavyweight Championship fight… Shakur… and perhaps his worst influence Suge Knight… did a very public… punching and kicking beat down on a REAL GANGBANGER… ORLANDO ANDERSON… A SOUTH SIDE COMPTON CRIP… AND A FEW HOURS LATER… TUPAC SHAKUR WAS SHOT AND MURDERED…

AND DIED ON SEPTEMBER 13, 1996… PAC WAS TWENTY-FIVE-YEARS OLD…

And here’s how Pac’s friends and acquaintances described Pac’s decision: (if you can call a thoughtless action a decision!)

“SO STUPID.” – YAASMYN FULA

“TOTALLY UNNECESSARY.”- LEILA STEINBERG

“RIDICULOUSLY DUMB.” – MONEY-B

“WITHOUT A SECOND OF WISDOM” – PRIME MINISTER PETE NICE

“F**** INSANE” – CHOPMASTER J

“OUT OF HIS ELEMENT” – JAMES ANDERSON

“INSANE” – ROB MARRIOTT

“HEARTBREAKING” –KENNY LESANE

“THE MOST MORONIC THING EVER.” – KENDRICK WELLS

“SO, SO, SO STUPID – AVRA WARSOVSKY

“NO JUDGEMENT TO SPEAK OF.” – BARBARA JEAN POWERS

“UNWISE TO THE EXTREME.” – WOOD HARRIS

“DUMBER THAN DUMB.” – LELA ROCHON

“THE WORST MOVE EVER.” – ERNEST DICKERSON

“STAGGERINGLY IDIOTIC.” – RYAN D

“UNCALLED FOR.” – BRIAN TIMES




Profile Image for Honestly Rani.
24 reviews1 follower
September 27, 2025
Wow, what a ride. Tupac remains a towering figure not only in rap and hip hop, but also in 90s pop culture. When I came across this book, my inner child demanded I read it—and I’m so glad I did.

What makes Tupac so endlessly fascinating is his complexity. He was an enigma: a poet, the son of a Black Panther, an art student, and a West Coast gangsta rapper. Only God Can Judge Me thoughtfully unpacks those layers, offering a glimpse into the many sides of Tupac. Still, I’m not sure we’ll ever truly know who he was at his core.

From a young age, Tupac had to master the art of survival, which meant knowing who to be and when. That adaptability was part of his brilliance, but it may also have contributed to his downfall. This book, however, captures his humanity, allowing us to see the “baby” behind Brenda’s Got a Baby—a song that, heartbreakingly, remains as relevant in 2025 as it was in the 90s (Google Na’Ziyah Harris for proof).

And that’s Tupac’s enduring brilliance: his ability to spotlight the issues that continue to plague our country, particularly communities of color. Sadly, so much of what he rapped about hasn’t changed—but that’s also why his voice and message still carry so much weight today.

A fascinating, engaging, and deeply moving read. Without a doubt, one of the best books I’ve picked up this year.


Thank you to NetGalley for the audiobook ARC!

Profile Image for Ashley.
26 reviews1 follower
October 21, 2025
Five out of five stars.

I would like to start out by letting you know that I personally knew very little about Tupac Shakur prior to reading, Only God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakur by Jeff Pearlman. I will say I could name a few song titles, sing along to a couple choruses and knew what he visually looked like, but that’s about it. After completing this beautifully researched and written book I’m proud to say I know a lot more.

I found that, Only God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakur by Jeff Pearlman left me with a much deeper appreciation for Tupac and his life story. The book spans Tupac’s life from his meager beginnings to his untimely passing. I found that the pace of this book felt perfect. I never felt like a section of Tupac’s life was rushed through.

Jeff Pearlman has done an amazing job of portraying every complex side of Tupac in this book. Tupac lived through many hardships; moving frequently, growing up poor, living with an addict, and navigating rough neighborhoods. After all of that and against all odds he somehow ended up being someone who should be remembered.

Whether or not you enjoy rap, this book is worth reading. Tupac’s life was fascinating, and I had no idea how much I was going to enjoy this title when I started it. Even though I personally grew up in very different situations than Tupac; his life still had glimmers of relatability. I think that anyone who chooses to read, Only God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakur by Jeff Pearlman will finish the book feeling like they made a good choice by picking it up.

I am truly thankful for being given the opportunity by NetGalley, author Jeff Pearlman, and Mariner Books for the opportunity to read an advance reader copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
4 reviews
September 1, 2025
Famously infamous figures are the hardest to hear about. Tupac has been dead for nearly 30 years. He is remembered as almost a mythical being. Jeff Pearlman successfully takes on the task of dissecting Tupac's life from the beginning. Even super fans might not know much of the information Pearlman includes. As mentioned in the acknowledgements, he interviewed close to 700 people for the book. The result is a narrative with well-backed evidence. The reader learns that Tupac was a much more complicated individual than his public persona let on. Tupac was a genius poet, actor, lyricist, and creator. However, how he truly lived from the beginning to end of his life is covered only in this book. The story is beautiful and heartbreaking. It doesn't matter if you weren't alive for the events of the book; you feel every moment. You can visualize the apartments and houses Tupac grew up in. You can hear the sounds of the cities he lived in. You can feel the weight of his choices. You finish reading with a mental dichotomy of Tupac. On one side, he's the smart, sensitive actor just trying to be seen, heard, and loved. On the other, he commands nonstop attention, makes detrimental choices, and acts like he's playing the part of a thug. It's heartbreaking to think what he could have become, but this book demonstrates that Tupac was a multifaceted being in ways not yet known by the public. Pearlman's commitment to research shines through this book. Though much of it is quotes, it flows like a story more than a biography. In piecing together the collective memory of Tupac, Pearlman ultimately creates a masterpiece.
Profile Image for Mim_Who _Reads.
119 reviews
September 28, 2025
Jeff Pearlman’s Only God Can Judge Me presents Tupac Shakur in all his complex layers. brilliant, magnetic, and vulnerable. What stood out the most was the author’s ability to strip away myth and present the person behind the legend, weaving together a good amount of research and first-hand accounts into something that felt real and unapologetic. The narrative provides a multifaceted image of Tupac but at the same time it sort of doesn’t sanitize or glorify the late amazing artist. For those curious about Tupac as more than just an icon, this book digs beneath the surface and reveals the heavy burdens he carried, the spaces he transformed, and the tragic loneliness that shadowed him until the end.

The book also shines a light on the layers of oppression and inequality many Black people face in this society. It shows that success isn’t simply a matter of pulling oneself up by the bootstraps, because the systems in place often work against them. I truly enjoyed this book

I listened to the ALC from NetGalley, and while the narrator’s voice was pleasant, the delivery often felt monotone and flat. It was more like a 5PM news report than a compelling story. Having said that, it didn’t take away from the overall narrative and its message.

Thank you NetGalley and HarperAudio Adult | Mariner Books for the ALC
Profile Image for Roberts Joseph.
33 reviews
October 25, 2025
Lives of Tupac Shakur by Jeff Pearlman is more than a biography , it’s a resurrection. In Only God Can Judge Me, Pearlman turns his journalist’s precision and narrative instinct toward one of the most mythologized artists of the modern era, stripping away decades of noise to reveal the human being behind the icon.

Across nearly seven hundred interviews, Pearlman reconstructs the turbulent, creative, and contradictory world that produced Tupac , a man at once poet and prophet, victim and visionary. He brings readers deep into the corridors of Death Row Records, the cultural firestorm of 1990s hip hop, and the psychological landscape of an artist who spoke truth through fury and vulnerability alike.

This is not hagiography , it’s history rendered with empathy and edge. Pearlman captures the brilliance and volatility of a life that continues to echo through music, race, and culture today. Lives of Tupac Shakur is not just a definitive biography , it’s a vital reckoning with what America made of Tupac, and what Tupac made of America.
Profile Image for Adam Parrilli.
166 reviews1 follower
August 6, 2025
It seems there will never be a DEFINITIVE book on Tupac Amaru Shakur, that is, until he himself pens it. This book, like every other one of its ilk, still manages to stoke the faintest flame of conspiracy that 'Pac is alive and well somewhere in Havana, Stockholm, or Sydney.

The greatest section of this book for me was the come up. Tales of Tupac's youth and teenage years in NYC, Baltimore, and Marin City. I was definitely surprised that the author, Jeff Pearlman, undertook this subject. Most of his other books are about sports celebrities. It is a well done work on an impossibly difficult to trace individual. Based on his public persona it's astounding that Tupac is described as "effeminate" innumerable times in this book. Tupac was so misunderstood and sadly allied with the wrong people/person.

I hope Tupac is resting wherever he is and at least we have the brilliance of his music to keep us. Pour one out and pump the tune "Check Out Time." Rest in power, legend.
Profile Image for sir chester snickerdoodle.
89 reviews
October 25, 2025
Since I heard this was in the works a year ago, I’ve been waiting for this one. Remembered the release date. Preordered it. Anticipated it.

I knew Jeff Pearlman doesn’t do anything halfway. I knew it would be loaded with the untold stories and jaw dropping revelations his books are known for. I knew he
would manage to once again take an overfamiliar subject and somehow make it so unfamiliar, you walk away feeling as if you hadn’t known the subject at all (the best kind of storytelling).

Tupac Shakur is by far one of the single most interesting and extraordinarily complex people we’ll ever see. I don’t know how I’ve never seen a biography on him until now. But I’m glad it was Pearlman who took this project on. He’s at his absolute best telling this story.

This is the biography of the decade.
Profile Image for Rob Warner.
293 reviews4 followers
November 2, 2025
I remember when Tupac was shot and killed. I remember when Biggie was shot and killed. Both men have had outsized impacts on American culture, and their music holds up even today.

This was both an amazing and a depressing read. So much background, so many voices, so many stories, so much insight. All about an incredibly talented yet incredibly flawed human being who apparently passed on his abuse and trauma to many (most?) of those around him. Someone who fought hard for opportunities that he sabotaged. Someone who treated women as playthings. Someone soft who played hard, and that was his undoing.

The book is well written, though it seems to try to model scripture with phrases like "he knew not" -- something I've read only in the Bible. I assume that was intentional, but it sounded weird.

Glad I read it. Now, I'm going to read something happier.
Profile Image for Michelle.
4 reviews
November 2, 2025
Does the author think Tupac is a disgusting human being? He painted him as such so I was just asking. Once he lied about the event in Marin City I was done with this Pearlman guy. Horrible.

Oh, one more question.... Does the author think Tupac's mother, the mighty Afeni, was a crack fiend hick with yellow teeth and shit stains on her clothes? Afeni Shakur would NEVER have shit stains on her clothes EVEN IN JAIL. Have you lost your mf mind? I mean even when she was down and on crack she, according to her son, was a BLACK QUEEN. Author man, do you know this lyric that Tupac wrote in his most famous song. EVEN AS A CRACK FIEND YOU ALWAYS WAS A BLACK QUEEN. So why you draggin her down to shit stains. And what do you know about nappy? Jeez, disgraceful and disrespectful.

I never met Tupac but I saw Afeni speak once at an event. She was graceful and regal.

Shame on this author.
Profile Image for Matty Fek.
84 reviews17 followers
November 10, 2025
While I like 2pac’s music I have always been more of a Biggie fan but I didn’t read this because of 2pac of author Jeff Pearlman. I became of fan of his from social media but when I heard him tell the story and research involved in finding the actual baby from the song “Brenda’s got a Baby” I knew I had to read this. This is a warts and all account of Tupac’s life. It paints a sad picture of a complicated multi-layered person who grew up in abuse and had to mask his true self and code switch depending on his surroundings. Tupac comes off very unlikeable and disgusting which I appreciate it not being sugar coated but at the same time trying to see the world through Tupac’s eyes. I knew most of the story as a fan of 90’s Hip-Hop if you have any interest in 2pac or like fascinating story telling this is a solid recommend
Profile Image for Jake Chavez.
218 reviews1 follower
November 11, 2025
This is my fourth Jeff Pearlman book and I was excited for this one being a massive 2Pac fan. One thing that I think most people would have a hard time accepting about this book, is that Tupac was kind of a jerk. There are numerous stories of multiple people noting his unprofessionalism or bad attitude. I found this very insightful considering most 2Pac fans always revered him because they never heard these testimonials. Pearlman interviewed over 600 people for this book, so I'd be hard pressed to think there wasn't some truth to these encounters. The book itself was very interesting and well written. I thought the author did a good job trying to cover topics or events that haven't been documented before. I've watched about every 2Pac documentary there has been before, and this book had some things that I didn't know.
1,029 reviews45 followers
November 13, 2025
This is a triumph of research. Pearlman interviewed tons of people, from his high school girlfriend to a EMT who treated him after getting shot in the balls, to the tattoo artist who gave Shakur his famous "THUG LIFE" tattoo. You get a very definite sense of things that happened to him. And Pearlman gets a series of great finds, ranging from Suge Knight sending Shakur's cremeated remains to his kin in a cardboard box via Federal Express to learning that some of his ashes were buried and given a tombstone in Lumberton, NC.

Shakur remains a bit of a mystery in the middle of it all. There's also less on his music than I would've guessed. It's mostly the things that happened to him.

I give it 4.5 stars. Right now I'm rounding it down to four, but I can easily be talked into five stars.
Profile Image for Angelica.
118 reviews1 follower
October 16, 2025
Jeff Pearlman does a great job at flushing out Tupac Shakur's life and how the circumstances he grew up with (a drug addict mother Afeni, no father, humble beginnings) shaped who he was as an artist. I thought I knew a lot about Tupac's life, but found that it was not the case at all! There were so many nuances that were flushed out. Some examples - finding the now-adult baby that inspired the song "Brenda's Got a Baby"; interviews with prior music partners, teachers, Pearlman did such a good job giving us a rich context of Tupac's life; you can tell that he did a lot of work gathering the information to present this very thorough biography. Kudos to him for such a great job!

Thanks to NetGally for the advance copy of this book. I am leaving a voluntary review.
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