AIN'T NUTHIN GOING ON BUT THE RENT Audiobook By JANET BLIGE cover art

AIN'T NUTHIN GOING ON BUT THE RENT

Virtual Voice Sample
Try for $0.00
Prime logo Prime members: New to Audible?
Get 2 free audiobooks during trial.
Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection.
Unlimited access to our all-you-can listen catalog of 150K+ audiobooks and podcasts.
Access exclusive sales and deals.
Premium Plus auto-renews for $14.95/mo after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

AIN'T NUTHIN GOING ON BUT THE RENT

By: JANET BLIGE
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try for $0.00

$14.95/month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $3.99

Buy for $3.99

Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.

AIN’T NOTHING GOING ON BUT THE RENT

Rent is due. Dreams are optional.

Alicia is a waitress in a dying dive bar, driving a car that’s one breakdown away from ruining her life, raising a smart little girl in a city that doesn’t wait for women to catch up. Every dollar is already spent before it’s earned. Every favor comes with a price. And every promise—from men, family, and the system—is built to collapse.

When survival forces her into choices she never imagined making, Alicia learns the hard truth about poverty: it doesn’t just take money, it takes dignity, time, and belief. Surrounded by broken men chasing fantasies, a family trapped in cycles, and a world that demands sacrifice without mercy, she finds refuge in the one place she still controls—her imagination.

What begins as sketches on a napkin becomes Queen’s City, a children’s comic inspired by the neighborhood that raised her and the daughter she refuses to let be swallowed by it. As art turns into opportunity, Alicia must decide whether she’s brave enough to step out of survival mode and claim a future that doesn’t require her to disappear.

This is not a rags-to-riches fantasy.
It’s a story about bills, boundaries, motherhood, and quiet resilience.
About choosing dignity when no one is watching.
About building something real when nothing is promised.

Because sometimes, ain’t nothing going on but the rent—and what you do about it decides everything.

African American Genre Fiction Urban
No reviews yet