Miles Marshall Lewis
- Additional Crew
Growing up in the northeast Bronx in the 1980s, Miles Marshall Lewis
had Queen Latifah and Kurtis Blow for neighbors and Doug E. Fresh's
producer for a high school choir director. He danced in the video for
Doug E. Fresh's "Keep Risin' to the Top" in 1987 and attended Morehouse
College in Atlanta during the socially conscious "golden age" era of
hip-hop culture. While later attending the Fordham University School of
Law in Manhattan, Lewis became an acclaimed music journalist writing
for Rolling Stone, The Village Voice and elsewhere. In the late '90s,
he worked briefly as an editor for Vibe and XXL magazines. In 2004,
Lewis published one of the first critically acclaimed hip-hop
generation memoirs, entitled "Scars of the Soul Are Why Kids Wear
Bandages When They Don't Have Bruises." The same year, he moved to
Paris, France, in response to the Iraq War, inspired by black
expatriate forebears like James Baldwin and Richard Wright. Lewis is
the founder and editor of "Bronx Biannual," described as an urbane
urban literary journal containing exceptional fiction and essays from
today's top writers.