Keith Manning Jr. grew up loving blocks his family had lived on for generations but never owned. His mother's first home showed him what a deed could give a family-and what ownership alone could not fix. A childhood dream of becoming a McDonald's owner-operator ended in a single morning, and that betrayal pushed him toward real estate, appraisal, public service, and a new understanding of power.
Pride, Property & Power braids memoir with a practical blueprint for young Black and Latino men navigating credit, homeownership, the trades, investing, relocation, property taxes, and generational wealth. Honest about violence, displacement, business betrayal, and the real costs first-generation owners carry, Manning argues one thing without flinching: pride in where you come from should never cost you the chance to own, build, and leave something behind.
Written by a licensed broker and certified appraiser who has stood on both sides of the closing table, the book turns hard-won experience into a map anyone can follow. Pride is not equity. This is the guide he had to draw by hand-handed to the next one coming up.