James M. Moten, a retired U.S. military veteran and author, has launched a new website, www.booksbyjamesmoten.com, providing readers with a central hub for his two deeply personal works: the memoir I IRS (My Hell of Life) and the poetry collection I The Black Poet Comes. The site offers direct access to the books, author background, media features, and book trailers.
Moten's writing is rooted in lived experience, reflecting a life shaped by racism, military service, public service, family strength, spiritual conviction, and the determination to endure. Across both titles, he writes with a voice that is direct, personal, and grounded in truth. His real-life journey as a Black man who endured racism, served in the U.S. military, and later worked within public service as an IRS agent is central to his work.
The memoir I IRS (My Hell of Life) traces Moten's early life in the segregated South, his years of military service, and the personal and professional challenges he faced along the way. Written with honesty and conviction, the book reflects on prejudice, faith, hardship, and the strength required to keep moving forward.
His second featured work, I, The Black Poet Comes, presents a collection of poems shaped by decades of struggle, reflection, and spiritual endurance. The collection speaks to racism, identity, pain, love, faith, and the human will to survive. Written in a voice that carries both street-level realism and spiritual depth, the poems offer readers a direct look into Moten's personal history and the wider experiences that shaped his perspective.
Born in 1947 in Crockett, Texas, Moten was the tenth of fourteen children. At the age of five, he moved with his mother and siblings to Tucson, Arizona, as his mother sought a safer future away from the racial tensions of the segregated South. He later served in both the United States Air Force and the United States Marine Corps, earned a degree in finance, worked for the IRS, and founded his own tax corporation.
Throughout his life, Moten encountered racism in both public and professional spaces. Those experiences continue to shape his writing, giving his books a voice grounded in memory, testimony, and faith. His work also honors the guidance of his mother, Arlishie Harris Moten, whose strength and influence remain central to his story.
Readers can learn more about I IRS (My Hell of Life), I, The Black Poet Comes, and Moten's author journey by visiting www.booksbyjamesmoten.com. Both books are available on Amazon, and book trailers are accessible on YouTube.


