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The voice in my head is God

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An Atria Book. Atria Books has a great book for every reader.

224 pages, Hardcover

Published March 3, 2026

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2 chainz

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Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Miranda.
195 reviews3 followers
January 5, 2026
Thank you #NetGalley, Atria Publishing, and 2 Chainz for an advanced readers copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

I wasn’t sure how I was going to feel about this book based off the title. I thought maybe it was going to be very out there for my taste. I was wrong. The title is a bit different but 2 chainz did a great job with the book. It’s refreshing to see he actually wrote it and didn’t hire a ghostwriter. It made the book feel more genuine and himself.

I will say, I would’ve enjoyed it more if it was in order versus jumping around throughout his life. I found myself confused sometimes thinking if this was when he was in high school, college, or after college.

I enjoyed his overall message and how he spoke about his parents, especially his dad. I don’t know much about him and it was nice to read about how he grew up.
Profile Image for Eros Rose.
394 reviews12 followers
March 2, 2026
“The trap had love in it every single day. That love isn’t talked about nearly enough.”

If you enjoy memoirs from celebrities that are laced in raw honesty, experiences & truths, then, this may be your next read.

This felt like I was sitting on the porch with an uncle & listening to him give advice, a verbal hug, hard truths about life, choosing yourself despite poor decisions, believing in a life that you desire, tuning into your intuition, leaning into listening to that voice in your head that navigates your wellbeing & more.

Typically, memoirs are very “start to finish” as far as the storyline goes. But, this was swiftly jumping from different experiences. From memories that fans could remember to more personal memories that give us a look into his life as a person, as well as, an artist.

This was personal yet relatable. Everything about this book felt honest. It is easy to walk away with something memorable or thought-provoking of your own from reading his story.

I’ve been a fan of 2Chainz before he was 2Chainz. I was so excited to read this. If you are a fan of him in any capacity, this is a book to add to your TBR.
Profile Image for Sarah Toback.
32 reviews
March 16, 2026
I love reading books by people from different walks of life. The book ended up being a little different than I thought. The Epilogue was my favorite part of the entire book, and I thought that was going to be the framework of the entire book.
I struggled throughout the book with the timeline, as he kept jumping around. And, although I understand he was connecting most of what he discussed to the inner voice and intuition, but so much of it came across as an in-your-face display of self-confidence, even cockiness.
Profile Image for Joshua.
24 reviews
March 14, 2026
Wow…. Kinda started listening to this as a joke, but pretty quickly was so sucked in. Great memoir with great stories read by 2 Chainz himself (great reading voice). *some* lessons here, but most of all just a really entertaining and relatively quick read/listen. Also just always down for more reminders to listen to my intuition and my gut. It’s super easy in this world to tap OUT of the intuition and tap into logical reasoning. While logical reasoning is important most of the time, we all could use some reminders to get back into ourselves, and out of our heads.
Profile Image for Mia.
99 reviews2 followers
March 16, 2026
Listened otw to Miami! It was interesting to learn more about his life, especially listening to the audiobook with him reading it.
Profile Image for Whitney Carlson.
19 reviews1 follower
March 15, 2026
Honestly, a good read. if I were still teaching highschool, it would be a memoir I would teach portions of.
Profile Image for jlynmac.
321 reviews15 followers
Read
March 4, 2026
*no rating for memoirs*

Part memoir part self help that didn't come off cliche. No ghostwriter was involved, 2Chainz wrote it himself. The timeline jumped around a bit, but for me that's what made it feel more relatable. I also loveddd that there are sound effects sprinkled all throughout on audio–and that he narrates it. Def recommend if you're a fan of his or like celebrity memoirs in general. I've always been a fan and loved hearing more about him!
Profile Image for Allie Ryan.
70 reviews
March 12, 2026
It is refreshing when a bad ass such as two chainz can level with a reader so plainly about the importance of putting your faith in God to put you on the right path. This book was entertaining AF. definitely recommend the audiobook!
Profile Image for Boxhuman .
158 reviews11 followers
March 2, 2026
I remember the day when I picked up a newly released, ‘Pretty Girls Like Trap Music’ from the public library. I had only vaguely heard of 2 Chainz before that and unfortunately didn’t catch his, ‘Based on a T.R.U. Story’ album. In fact, I was still very new to enjoying rap and had never heard of the trap music genre.

I hadn’t really grown up in an environment that listened or praised rap and hip hop music. Even though being from Detroit, I was raised more on Motown, Soul, Rock and 50’s Polish Polka.

Even when Eminem became huge, I never felt like rap spoke to me. It felt like it was for someone else.

So, why did I pick out ‘Pretty Girls Like Trap Music’? I guess pure curiosity and the thirst for something different. Something that felt raw and real. And I got just that. I loved it.

Now, when I saw that 2 Chainz, aka Tity Boi, aka Tauheed Epps, had a book on Goodreads for a giveaway, you know I was interested. Or as he might say, something told me to enter into the giveaway. And here we are. I’m glad to say that I won a copy.

I’m not one to follow celebrities closely and honestly, I think this made ‘THE VOICE IN MY HEAD’ a smoother read as each chapter was a new revelation to his past, his words, and the way his mind works. If you’re a fan, you will still find a lot of good backstories, but you may have already heard some of his experiences.

The book is written in different chapters that focus on a certain topic/event/theme, all while tying in the overall theme of the book – trust your intuition. Some of the chapters can be repetitive if you’re reading the book in its entirety instead of hearing each chapter separately. His writing voice and style rely on repetition. The same phrases are used (sometimes within the same paragraph) throughout the book. It’s a stylistic choice, but if that doesn’t vibe with you, you might find it frustrating. I didn’t find it too detracting, but it was noticeable.

One thing you will find out from this book is that 2 Chainz has a lot of confidence. He’s a salesman. He can sell you marijuana, sell you an album, sell you a concert, even a smoothie from Smoothie King. He sells with the confidence of a salesman. However, as much as he elevates himself, he is more than ready to elevate others (more on that later). As much as he flexes, he’s also sharing his awe, aware of his journey to get where he is. He’s selling you as much as he’s selling himself, and I was delighted by that.

The journey to the top has been challenging for him, but the positivity he exudes diminishes the hardship without dismissing it. It is horrifying to hear of his arrests as a young boy. I don’t think kids these days will understand the crackdown on marijuana during the D.A.R.E. era and the ‘Say No to Drugs’ Nancy Reagan era. To hear how he was treated for selling marijuana was infuriating. But despite the anger and injustice, he’s resilient.

And he gives the credit of his resilience to his father and especially his mother, whom he adores. I had no clue that ‘Tity Boi’ was a nickname for a mama’s boy and, too, thought it was something sexualized. It’s almost laughable if it weren’t so wholesome. The love and respect he has for his mother is endless and bottomless, and it’s really sweet to read it.

But let’s get back to taking about that voice – that silly, little cartoon angel whispering in our ear – and how the book focuses on it. Epps’s entire book is a love letter to that voice, which he attributes to intuition, gut, and/or God. It’s the voice that tells you if something is off, or if something is a worthwhile risk. The one that pushes you to do more, or to hold you back from danger.

Within the book, he attributes it to a higher power, whether it’s secular or spiritual. Being a psychology major, he brings different voices of psychology and business to illustrate his points and beliefs. As a skeptic who was willing to go along for the ride, I appreciated that he gave many different interpretations to this voice, which I think many people will be able to connect with.

He puts you on game with your relationship with your own voice, asking important questions. What does it sound like? Do you listen? When was the last time you heard it? Do you trust it (and truly, do you trust yourself)?

I think that’s the beauty of this book. Yes, it has the cool parts of hanging with celebrities, flying on private jets, wearing the slickest clothes, going to crazy parties. But that isn’t the vine of his message, only the fruit. And I do agree with the concept that positivity attracts positivity, that pushing yourself will reproduce results, and that listening to your gut (especially as part of a minority) is a vital part of survival, not only physically but emotionally/spiritually.

Speaking of minorities: I see you, Mr. Epps. How dare you make me cry by explicitly standing up for the LGBTQ community, especially trans folx. I really did appreciate this mention and how ‘I’m Different’, was written in the same spirit of individuality and with respect to all of our journeys. It means a lot these days.

As of this review, trans people just had their licenses revoked in Kansas. And Mr. Epps being sure to speak directly to LGBTQ people goes a long way right now. He reminds us that yes, we’re all different. And instead of that being something to fear, it’s something to celebrate and embrace. So, yes, you got some tears out of this old weary heart.

I also cried when he was speaking about the loss of his father. I understand how incredibly hard it is for men (especially Black men) to confront those overwhelming emotions and become vulnerable. It’s hard to confront that in your own privacy, let alone in your first book, but 2 Chainz is very real and upfront about the passing of his father and the toll it took on him. He paints a beautiful picture of his father, who was imprisoned for a large majority of 2 Chainz’s life, but the support he still felt his whole life. Epps shares poignant stories, the letters he received, and the belief that he’s still being watched over. It’s a touching memorial to his father.

Now, after all that, I have to bring up the most glaring issue with the book: the omissions. In the book, 2 Chainz brings up many collaborations he’s had in the past and working with various artists, like Kanye West and Drake. The words Epps has for his past collaborators (especially Ye) are kind. Maybe too kind. And herein lies the problem, this book is very positive but the lack of any negative rumination or questioning for these artists is…something.

I understand that the focus is more of himself and his positivity, but when these artists are mentioned, it’s also glowing reviews. Not a speck of dirt. Not a second glance. Not a pause of doubt. Now, I’m not looking for hot gossip or a psychological write-up, but it is strange to find each experience devoid of any negativity or reflection. As if 2 Chainz walking on shells to make any comment that isn’t flattering.

I’m not trying to ridicule or criticize him, but just to make a note of it. I’m putting 2 Chainz on game, which he taught me in this book. It’s just something I noticed.

But as I said before, he’s a salesman. He’s a brand. He’s evolving and changing his name, over and over, finding that Venn diagram of his individuality and what will sell. Which collaboration will be fun and marketable.

And he’s very good at it; as of this review, his collaboration with Prof and That Mexican OT is trending on social media (‘Big Dog’). Paired with this book’s release date, the song, and touring at the same time, it’s easy to see the timing.

After I finished the book, I gave it to my mom to read, as she’s a big softie, but doesn’t know many rappers. I think that’s the kind of book, ‘THE VOICE IN MY HEAD’ is. You can give it to your mom and she’ll probably cry and learn a few things, too.

*Bottomline: The book is pricey, I’m not going to lie, but it’s from a Black publisher, focusing on Black artists. So maybe splurge a little. I think it’s worth it. 4/5* (I really do hope they’ve edited out the numerous formatting errors, though).

(PS- quick story: Years ago I was hosting a WWE birthday party where I asked guests to make up their own WWE character. Tons of fun. Made a pinata as the rival heel to wrestle with and break open. Anyway, my character was ‘1 Chainz’ and my backstory was that I was trying to follow my long-lost brother’s, 2 Chainz’s, footsteps but the problem is that I can’t rap.)

Oh dang. He’s going to book signings this week, too: https://www.simonandschuster.com/book.... Why not Detroit? XD
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Aliyah.
2 reviews
January 13, 2026
ARC Review: As a 2 chainz stan I was so surprised and excited when I won this book! Something told me I just wouldn’t win lol. There are a lot of valuable lessons in this book and a good amount of funny moments “I’m Micheal Jackson” being my favorite. This book has encouraged me to trust my gut and get more in tune with my inner voice. Well done Tit!
Profile Image for Holly Stahl.
94 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 16, 2026
Errors:

Spacing error on page 16 between "pistol on us, hit / Robert in the head"

Grammatical from page 42 to 43: "That's how ended up in a place..."

Page 58: "The second drug bust happened my when I was..."

Page 131: "I studied his face, seeing my face IS his. I even saw my eldest daughter's face in his.

Page 197, excess punctuation: "...arms raised. "Officer, what's going on.? I don't know..."


Review is courtesy of a physical ARC from Simon and Schuster, won from a giveaway here on Goodreads. And in winning a copy of this work at all, I open my review by openly challenging other readers to confront internalized prejudice. What else can explain how a giveaway of five copies of another physical book can garner 47k+ giveaway entrants, whilst 100 copies of this book doesn't break a THOUSAND entrants in the same span of time? How does one confront the apparent apathy for the voice behind this book? There's an inconvenient reality about the general disinterest that's unsettling to regard. One of the ideas in the book, 'Love amidst limitations' receives conceptual recognition throughout genres in the literary space, but why does it feel hollow here? Is it prejudice for the voice or the content?


After several days mulling over this, there's an undercurrent present in many successful books that's absent from this work: an inherent appreciation of the written word and its power. In the last five books I've read (including another review on the way), four were relationally reliant on letters: between magical typewriters, handwritten and passed between a bootlegger during prohibition, or in this instance prison letters. Protagonists clutched literacy like a lifeline, and many other books that succeed possess this quality because the book itself is the manner of communication. In the last fifteen books I've read, protagonists either are, wish to be, or harness qualities of a librarian or scholar, because their roles in society allowed them the commodity of comfort to engage in the sedentary practice of scholarship. These other characters had the backdrop of war, or external conflict that allowed them connection to possessions, just as 2Chainz had the ever-present threat of law enforcement clashes and the one thing that didn't always get stolen when guardianship shifted: his fashionable clothes.


That quality is mostly absent, despite Derrick Harriell's efforts at congruence, in this work. 2Chainz touts academic prowess that fluctuates in consistency, especially if you bear to source his lyrics elsewhere. Reflection bereft of quantification. Conflation of his own psyche as something just as removed and influential as paternal presence. The hustle was as imbued in 2Chainz as his heartbeat, and the impermanence of physical security reflects itself in the scattering of thoughts throughout, mirroring the cherry-picking from prison letters from his father. A tone that underlies questionable sincerity: is this book merely another self-serving business venture, like the gentleman's club, or legal speakeasies with a lady named Snoop, or a Smoothie King in the arena 2Chainz likes his sports? 


There's part something to honor his parents when frayed memory remits nostalgia, and part legible legacy, with a heavy dose of narcissism throughout. Were this a more personal, sincere pursuit, we would've had more included from the prison letters or from his still-surviving mother (more than "I bought her houses"). The book would be more Tauheed, and less 2Chainz, and the applicants from the giveaway interest alone predicts likewise reception. If I didn't know this from personal experience, on page 122 where a picture of one of the enveloped letters is included, you can faintly see a 7-line stamping. This stamp loosely states the contents have been read and reviewed prior to submission to the post office. Only in the recent decade has this changed, to "the department of corrections has neither censored nor inspected this item and assumes no responsibility for its content." Vital context for readers who have never received incarcerated correspondence. 2Chainz makes no connection to the stripping of privacy, except in the story of urinating in front of officers as a child and what readers have already seen portrayed in crime dramas about prison visitation. Instead, these personal revelations providing foundational insight found in these prison letters remain a mystery, apart from "God is Love." Each letter nestled in an envelope to arrive at Tauheed's home was sealed only by correctional officers. Each letter received in prison was torn open and read by correctional officers before transmission to Tauheed's father. More critical details of confinement and stripped privacy that would speak to the good faith of this work, absent. It also requires understanding (not excusal) of the culture that exists during the timeframe they unfold. Shooting another man who wronged you in the stomach is bad advice from a dad calling from prison, but recognizing the impact of parental absence, how it exacerbates poor decision making, is paramount to understanding the import of the Inner Voice/intuition. Masculine absence overburdens maternal caretakers, making intuitive guidance requisite for survival. 


Maybe that's how most of black culture has to break through, despite marketing acumen: perpetuate its own quality through diverse means. Yet in this case, 2Chainz seems to pontificate for the sake of it, despite a bachelor's degree in psychology. Despite a questionable moral compass and touting moralistic integrity. The cognitive dissonance drowns the quality of this work, like bass struggling against a rattling trunk as he sold weed in Atlanta since pubescence. Most won't interpret the incongruencies as failures, yet they're clearly marked. Tauheed fails to bridge the connection between the aftermath of his home being raided by cops (the second time in his life because his mom's boyfriend was selling crack), but also by neighbors (page 65). His own people were pilfering vultures in response to the harm this "morality" failed to recognize. Ironically, this is also regarded on page 71, quoting Jay-Z: "Show 'em how to move in a room full of vultures."


Rap has always been regarded as the poetry of poverty when the prosaic preamble of silent protests remain unheard. The echo of frustration in the absence of hope. What differentiates 2Chainz in this regard, from philanthropists that prey on the underprivileged youth around winter holidays, despite hyper-urban hellscape relegation the rest of the year. Crime and tragedy are brethren when minority voices scrounge for financial means scraped clean from respectable pathways. And when these voices perform in a manner more receptive for higher classes, they remain unheard, proven capable of simplistic yet scholastic comport yet on the whole ignored. Why? Is it to be credited to an absent perspective of self-respect?


Probably because the ends are trying to justify the means in a system that ruins itself. While marijuana has become more medicinally respected in the current century, other drugs like crack have mercilessly decimated communities. The soulless disconnect between what drugs Tauheed sold, and not why, distance itself from conscionable ignorance. He actively participated (and participates, in certain ventures) in profiteering that degrades the community he claims is foundationally loving, and acknowledges no aversion. He hires a guy who makes the bread and one who manages his circuses, and fails to recognize his own microcosm encourages societal impediment because the checks clear. 


Tragically, in this same way the book feels like empty predation. 2Chainz is wealthy beyond general recognition, exhibiting unrestrained callousness crediting an opportunistic mindset cloaked as intuition. Deprivation in his youth paid adverse dividends that spurred gluttony, even as he says he would rather invest his money than spend it on more jewelry. Just because you pour poison into a depleted well doesn't mean the water rose. 


Time after time, the book catalogs fiscal conquests while touting simplicity. Meagerness is where God is, and where 2Chainz was relegated: to the margins, but the book refuses inheritance of the humility. That's where the meat of this book is found, despite the gristle of hubris: recognizing chance opportunities and reacting accordingly. Listening to the intuition and acting in accord to the outcome desired. At times I question Tauheed's ease of aptitude through school (claiming his first C [in college] was only because he wanted to 'see what it would take', and it was truancy). Derrick Harriell comes through too thick on the scholastic assistance at times. And many correlations that could have been made in the work were missing. Harriell wasn't around when Epps was completing degree course work, so the result of the book paints a more damning picture of what was actually required scholastically of college athletes in the early 2000's. Bearing that in mind, the diction creates a clearer ideological cohesion despite being bereft of humility.


One of the driving concepts are currency made manifest, and only by diversifying your relationships through utilizing honed intuition can they translate to fiscal wealth. In suburbia Atlanta, that did start with dealing and gambling, because risk-management was the backbone of civil rights. On the other side of the coin, what does white collar work heavily rely on? Intuition and risk-management strategies. The callousness I recognized earlier is foundational to white collar profit. Is the correlation recognized plainly in the pages? Not directly, but the vehicle for the concept was the same.


Rap music as a genre made itself virulent in this century, in the best and worst ways. In the vacuum of Total Request Live's absence, self-made artists clamored for Top Eight space on Myspace, social media broke chokepoints in the late 2000's made by Columbia and Interscope records, where executives no longer dammed or filtered the creative content. The scrutiny Tauheed's father's prison letters were bound to were absent in this space. The key to 2Chainz success wasn't when SoundCloud formed and mixtapes no longer required capital to burn onto discs and generate, but the connections made with those already plucked from obscurity. When the rap world opened to anyone with a reliable Internet connection, 2Chainz was caught in the backswell through more traditional (albeit illegal means) of networking: over a 'pack'. Lyrical substance receded whereas gimmicks bound to erratic beats bereft of traditional meter took center stage. Chapter fifteen relays this idea by way of business ventures: it didn't have to be about the content if it conveyed a concept. It bears to reason why Tity Boy didn't really fly (page 95) as a stage name, and Dolla thought "Duffle Bag Boys" for a song sounded stupid. Sometimes concepts need gritty rebranding, like a self-help book with a menacing cover by a minority voice, or trap music spinning off from The Rap Industry™️ in the early 2010s, casually inferred in the book. 


The cover doesn't traditionally match the marketing of its content cousins. There's no bright yellows and greens and whites with a massive subtext near the bottom; instead it's a gnarled half-profile in deep tones with a hand-drawn cartoon angel. One could infer HE is his own devil for the other shoulder off-cover. The visual aberration matches the T.R.U. REALigion concept defined inside. It's the integrity, the honesty of self respect and honoring one's motivations that defines the self-help motivational autobiographical genre. It's about time the cover betrays our preconceptions, until the interior confirms motivations. 


I won't falsify preference for 2Chainz; despite a passing interest in the rap industry there are albums by Mos Def, 50Cent, Dr. Dre, Busta Rhymes and NF in my media cabinet. It's almost requisite that DTP (Disturbing Tha Peace) artists cycle through my Spotify due to my proximity exposure to Atlanta-based artists from the early aughts. But this book was something less abstract and at the same time less topical than many of those albums; it comes back to how you process your own perception of life and living, devoid of guilt-ridden self-reflection.


I also won't falsify difficulty adapting to street speak, yet I'm thankful there's no appendix to rely on, explaining drug and crime culture concepts. The reward of chapter four is 2Chainz explaining terminology so your search history is spared. The work of understanding requires context diligence, which is thankfully rewarded with patience. Although, I don't disparage readers for the ethically challenging abuse of Urban Dictionary.


The heart of the work is in chapter 11, "Misfortunes Into Fortunes". It's where the book's title is derived and how 2Chainz spins setbacks. The chapter's content is how he applies this framework situationally. Most readers may not relate to having a medical event while showboating on expensive toys at a combined birthday party, yet still beholden to touring and rapping to promote an album. What readers can relate to is having to fulfill obligations due to challenging circumstances creatively. And that's why the Voice In Our Heads Is (Not) God: cloaking narcissism as inspirational clarity in the absence of certainty honors the hedonism survival demanded, betraying any honesty to be found in the work. 


Chapters sixteen to the end speak on refinements: how trusting intuition that's been developed won't deflect bad luck, but transmute it. How refining one's nutritional and spiritual needs can improve your inner dialogue with your body's function. How cultivating this relationship with ourselves manifests something nearing supernatural. It's habitual by this point; another instance when Harriell's assistance pins credible, sourced studies to what would be cast aside as hokum otherwise. Even when we are conceptualizing how we market ourselves with branded styles, we are connecting to the sincere root of conversation with the world.


I still don't know how the "Work At Night, Sleep On Planes" chapter fits in with all of this... But I enjoyed the anecdotes for what they were no less. 


The epilogue would have also served better much earlier on. There's dialectic nuance that contrasts well when establishing intuition and recognizing the deviation from that and the "Fuck It" voice. While the epilogue is effective, acknowledging the "Fuck It" voice earlier would properly establish a rubric of self-assessment for the reader that is glaringly absent. 


Non-fiction isn't my preferred written style nor rap preferred music, but in deviating from typical standards, readers can reaffirm the personal investment of cognitive plasticity. 'Do better to be better ', would be 2Chainz's phrasing. And the greater theme of diversity I addressed earlier establishes itself by its source: Black Privilege Publishing. I typically would be prejudiced against non-fiction, believing ethics and ideals better presented through literary devices than through outright declaration. However, lived experience can present the same as fiction, and creative conflict doesn't require dragons. 


Maybe the magic and the fantasy is from 2Chainz's intuition that led to his current station in life. If the latter isn't possible, we can all start with the former: the magic woven in listening to the voice in our head. The fantasy to claim our psychological construct isn't rooted in parasitic self-preservation. A book tour isn't the same as a music tour, but maybe in such conflation a broader audience can be acquired. Should it be, to dispell the shushing librarian, engaging custodians of intellectual pursuits with street drug decadence? Is there an overlap ready for profiteering? While I've made my opinions clear above, my internal jury continues deliberations. If nothing else, being more psychologically present with our motivations develops a widely-relatable sincerity. Something I wish this book did with better scrutiny. 

Profile Image for Nicholas Mccane.
163 reviews12 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 20, 2025
ARC Review: NetGalley and Atria Books
Release Date: 3-3-26
Author: 2 Chainz
As promised, here’s my honest review.

When I read the title of this book (The Voice in my Head is God), I was a little hesitant to read it. I was afraid that it would be really preachy. Not only am I a fan of him, but of the culture. So, I wondered which version of 2 Chainz I would encounter. I remembered thinking, did he get saved and stop cursing? lol. And although memoirs are my favorite genre, I don’t enjoy authors preaching to me. This was not that at all. 2 Chainz gave me exactly what I was looking for. It passed my checklist.

Who is 2 Chainz? ✅
Will he talk about his family? ✅
Will he talk about his street life? ✅
What about how he became a rapper? ✅
How did he get into fashion? ✅
Why the name change from Tity Boi to 2 Chainz? ✅
Will he give us stories about his experiences with other rappers? ✅

He answered all of that, and he taught us how you can accomplish many things by listening to your inner voice. He “spit game”. This book was deeply personal and spiritual.

It felt like he was having a conversation with his readers rather than giving us stories in chronological order.

There was even a chapter so deep that I had to put the book down and do some reflecting. I really enjoyed this read. 2 Chainz is the definition of Hip-Hop.

I recommend this book to anyone in their 40s, any fan of rap and hip-hop, anyone who has a love for the culture, and anyone who needs to be taught a little game by one of the OGs.
Profile Image for LiteraryMarie.
818 reviews59 followers
March 3, 2026
Grammy Award-winning rapper 2 Chainz (born Tauheed Epps) shares his spiritual journey in a new memoir titled The Voice in My Head is God. If you grew up in the church or you are in tune with the spirit, you know what voice he's talking about. It is the voice that guides you. The unmistakable nudge in the right direction. The unflinching feeling. The strong message you cannot ignore.

In his most personal work to date, 2 Chainz writes about the higher power that guided his steps to be the man he is today. He writes candidly about being raised by a single mother while his father served time in prison, growing up in College Park, Georgia, earning a basketball scholarship, being in the streets then pursuing a music career. Along the way, he identified the voice in his head as God and began listening. His life really is a testimony!

I just wish it was told better. I had to put the book down a few times. Not from boredom...far from it! There were two things that commanded reading breaks: pure blasphemy and a non-chronological timeline. Sir, explain to me why you think it was the voice of God telling you to not use another drug dealer's scale. Or crediting God for finding your plugs. I have to suspend both belief and faith to accept that an angel on your shoulder whispered such direction, let alone the voice of God. While I appreciated the examples he gave, it also would have read smoother if told in chronological order. He brought up experiences just to say "more about this later." When?! The book is only 200 pages.

Celebrity memoirs usually fall into two categories: guarded experiences or raw truths. I applaud 2 Chainz for writing his raw truths, exposing his background for potential judgment and rising to his full potential despite obstacles along the way. He was very forthcoming about his upbringing, the dynamics of his parents, home life and journey to becoming the successful rapper/businessman he is today. From listening to his music and lyrics over the years, I could already tell that 2 Chainz is an articulate, intelligent man. He is both street- and book-smart. This book is a shining example.

The Voice in My Head is in a genre of its own that I've named Trap Christian Nonfiction. It is for readers that believe in God, can appreciate a testimony and need a gentle reminder to just listen!

Happy Early Pub Day, 2Chainz! The Voice in My Head is now available.

Disclaimer: An advance copy was received directly from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. Opinions are my own and would be the same if I spent my hard-earned coins. ~LiteraryMarie
Profile Image for Living My Best Book Life.
999 reviews95 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
February 27, 2026
This book!! It's open, honest, and more than a memoir. This is motivation, and most of all it reminds you to pay attention to intuition.

2 Chainz is able to tell his story without the fear of holding back. I'm telling you, you will feel it in his words like you do through his music. He raises the question, "Have you ever heard that voice or had a gut feeling?" I know I have had that many times, and sometimes I listen. Too many times are we shamed for wanting to listen to our gut, often told to just ignore it.

In The Voice in My Head is God, 2 Chainz gives you his life story to show you how he listened to his gut and how that changed his life, helping him get to where he is today.

Definitely wasn't expecting this to be one of my favorite non-fiction reads of the year, but I couldn't help it. I was glued to the pages.
Profile Image for angie.
574 reviews54 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 9, 2026
I received this ARC from winning a giveaway of a stack of upcoming Atria releases!

At first, I wasn't too interested in reading this book because I'm not religious in any way. So if you feel the same way, I urge you to still pick this book up. This book's through line focuses on listening to the voice inside your head, to trust your instinct.

This autobiography is so interesting. The way that 2 Chainz is able to recount and reflect on parts of his life is fascinating and enthralling. I'm not the best person to give a review on 2 Chainz's autobiography, I don't know much about him to begin with, but this book and learning about his journey was very moving!
Profile Image for Tiffani Hobson.
1 review
March 10, 2026
I really enjoyed reading this autobiography by 2 Chainz. It was inspiring to get a deeper look into how he grew up and the journey that led him to stardom. The book gives a real and honest perspective on the struggles, lessons, and determination that shaped his path. I appreciated learning about how he built his success, the ways he made his money, and the role his upbringing played in who he became. It was also meaningful to read about his relationship with his parents and how those connections influenced his life. Overall, it was a powerful reminder that faith, perseverance, and love can guide you through anything. God is love.

193 reviews6 followers
March 12, 2026
If you grew up listening to lil Wayne, Kanye, and 2 chainz, like I did, this book is everything.

Not only do I resonate deeply with his view on life: God is guiding me through every step of my journey. When I listen, I always find myself blessed beyond measure.

I also relate to his mature perspective as we are now parents thinking about the legacy we want to leave for our children. This book is an amazing family heirloom.

It was short enough to not be boring, filled with fun tidbits, and best of all read by the author.
Profile Image for Brogan Plot Twist & Chill.
24 reviews2 followers
March 14, 2026
This book was definitely a step out of my comfort zone being I read Fiction book but I am very impressed with the outcome. I enjoy following along with one of my favorite artists and watching his journey into the man he is today. Most biographies are in chronological order but this book jumps around and made it more interesting and kept me wanting to know what would happen next. It helps you to understand that voice you always hear to make that decision, to follow your instincts. It makes you tap into that intuition. Thank you Netgally for allowing me to voluntarily review this book.
Profile Image for Hannah Davidson.
34 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
March 1, 2026
This book is so personal and uplifting. You don’t need to read the longest or most scientific self-help book on the market to improve your life. Remember to listen to the still small voice inside of yourself.

I was soooo excited to be chosen as a giveaway winner of an Advanced Reader Copy of this book, and now it will be added to my 2026 book suggestions ❤️❤️
Profile Image for Kith.
20 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
February 13, 2026
I love the book
1 review
March 12, 2026
Highly recommend the audio book. A great look at 2chainz life and I find myself thinking of the lessons daily. Truuuuuuuu
Profile Image for Fern.
5 reviews
March 12, 2026
“If it wasn’t for the struggle then I wouldn’t be me.” - 2 Chainz, 2017, 4 AM
Profile Image for Kearston.
54 reviews1 follower
March 12, 2026
Who doesn’t want to listen to 2 Chainz tell his life story? Highly recommend getting the audiobook.
Profile Image for Dustin Parks.
28 reviews
March 16, 2026
i like 2 chainz. this book is goofy though. pretty big yikes from beginning to end. too bad the voice in his head couldn’t talk him out of shouting out diddy in 2026…
Profile Image for Book Reviews by Tara aka Queen of Memoirs.
340 reviews83 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 3, 2026
The premise of this book is to inform the reader that the little voice we often hear inside our head, the voice most of us refer to as intuition, is actually God. According to 2 Chainz, this is God’s whisper. God’s way of directing us away from trouble. So when we hear it, we need to take heed. 2 Chainz provides multiple examples of how this voice has saved him from harm throughout his life. He credits the voice as his secret weapon. The reason for his success.

2 Chainz quotes authors and provides book titles to support his claims. For example, he quotes experimental psychologist Richard Wiseman and writes about Wiseman’s study on lucky and unlucky people. He also mentions other authors including Malcolm Gladwell and his book Outliers, and Shaquille O’Neal and his book Shaq Uncut. It’s references such as these that transform what could be the typical drug dealer turned rapper story into a solid body of work.

At this point you may be thinking this is a preachy read. But, nope it’s not. It contains the perfect balance between a trap story and life lessons, mixed with business advice and spiritual substance. The combination of all of these elements makes for a complete experience. There are stories of selling drugs. But also stories of the butterfly effect. He shares how he was once an addict, but now his health is one of his top priorities.

Other themes in the book include purpose, loyalty, rebranding, family bonds, business relationships and wellness.

Of all the relationships he writes about, it’s the relationship with his father that touched me the most. Throughout the book, 2 Chainz takes us on their emotional father-son journey. It’s a powerful story of love and forgiveness. He even includes letters written to him from his father while his father was incarcerated. There was one particular story about the two of them that made me smile. 2 Chainz describes how his “pops” kept album covers around the house. One being the New Edition Candy Girl album. 2 Chainz blames this album, the song Candy Girl in particular, for causing him to look for love at an age that was far too young 😂. I found this funny because of all the albums he mentions, Rick James included, he blames Candy Girl for turning him into a young Casanova 🤣.

I didn’t know much about 2 Chainz before reading this book. I’ve learned a lot about him. He’s one positive brotha. I like that!

Overall, I found this memoir more inspirational than spiritual. It’s a solid read that provides a fair amount of substance along with the drug dealer turned rapper narrative. This is the story of how Tauheed K. Epps went from Tity Boi to 2 Chainz. And he did it all by listening to the voice in his head. God!

Note: This book was gifted by Atria/Black Privilege Publishing in exchange for an honest review.
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