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  2. The Coldest Winter Ever - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Coldest_Winter_Ever

    The Coldest Winter Ever was one of the best-selling novels of 1999, and since its debut, it has continued to enjoy success in sales year after year. [4] As a result of this book, Sister Souljah cemented her role as a successful novelist.

  3. Sister Souljah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sister_Souljah

    The Coldest Winter Ever was widely acclaimed for making the second wave of the genre known as street literature more popular. [15] About this, Souljah said: I'm a college graduate, and if I read something like Romeo and Juliet, I'm reading about a gang fight, I'm reading about young love, young sex, longing. I'm reading the same themes that I'm ...

  4. Midnight: A Gangster Love Story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight:_A_Gangster_Love...

    [1] [2] It is a prequel of The Coldest Winter Ever (1999), the novel that spawned the contemporary street literature movement. It follows a young Black Sudanese Muslim immigrant in Brooklyn with whom Winter Santiaga associated before she was sent to prison.

  5. Coldest winter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coldest_Winter

    Coldest winter may refer to: The coldest winter, see List of weather records The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War (2007 book), a 2007 book about the Korean War

  6. Here Are The All-Time Record Cold Low Temperatures In All 50 ...

    www.aol.com/heres-time-record-cold-low-170000238...

    Montana is the coldest in continental U.S. history, dropping to minus 70 degrees at Rogers Pass on Jan. 20, 1954. (MORE: Most Extreme U.S. Cold Outbreaks ) 50-states-all-time-cold.jpg

  7. Year Without a Summer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_Without_a_Summer

    An eruption of Laki, in Iceland, was responsible for up to hundreds of thousands of fatalities throughout the Northern Hemisphere (over 25,000 in England alone), and one of the coldest winters ever recorded in North America, 1783–1784; long-term consequences included poverty and famine that may have contributed to the French Revolution in 1789.