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Trice Tyrell
Lott

Atlanta-born author of PO Boy Live

I write stories rooted in the raw, unfiltered realities of urban life. The kind of stories that carry truth, grit, and heart, because they come from lived experience and the world I see every day.

Tensions that builds

It starts small, then ramps up until you cannot look away.

Modern paranoia

Cameras, timelines, and reactions that move faster than truth.

Culture collision

Music, sports, media, and attention feeding the noise.

Personal stakes

My private life turns public, and the consequences follow.

My Book: PO BOY LIVE

When you feel watched, it changes everything.

This story is personal. It moves like real life does. Fast, unpredictable, and sometimes unbelievable until it happens to you.

I was settling into my first apartment when I started noticing things that did not make sense. Then I started seeing reactions online that felt like people knew more than they should. Comments. Tips. Jokes that hit too close. Before I could even process it, the situation spilled into entertainment, sports, and conversations that felt way out of reach.

ABOUT ME

My story, my voice

I’m Trice Tyrell Lott, born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, and I still live here. Atlanta is not just a backdrop for my work. It’s the heartbeat of it. The culture, the history, the energy, it all shows up in the way I write.

I don’t come from a traditional literary background. My passion for writing started as a simple thought that grew into something I could not ignore. Over time, that thought turned into purpose. I write across multiple genres including urban novels, biographies, action fiction, and folktales, but my signature stays the same. Authenticity, emotion, and lived experience.

GENRES

What I Write

No matter the genre, I write with truth, grit, and heart.

Urban Novels

Biographies

Action Fiction

Folktales

Recognized by respected outlets

PO Boy Live has earned high praise from respected literary outlets, including The US Review of Books and Pacific Book Review. That recognition matters to me because I write to leave an impact, not just tell a story.