Gone Fishin' (Easy Rawlins Series #6) by Walter Mosley

BUY IT NEW

  • $14.00 Online price
  • $12.60 Member price
  • Join Now
  • skip to cart
  • Add to Wish List

Usually ships within 24 hours

FIND IT IN OUR STORES

Enter a zip code

(Paperback)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5 (3 ratings)

Read customer reviews   Write a Review

 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Meet the Writer
  • Features
  • Full Product Details

Synopsis

Everything Easy Rawlins and Mouse Alexander ever knew about friendship, and themselves, comes apart at the seams when they enter a steamy bayou world of voodoo, sex, revenge, and death. Abridged. 3 CDs.

Annotation

Everything Easy Rawlins and Mouse Alexander ever knew about friendship, and themselves, comes apart at the seams when they enter a steamy bayou world of voodoo, sex, revenge, and death. Abridged. 3 CDs.

Charles Taylor

The '60s black power revolutionaries learned the effect that macho posturing wrapped up in racial resentment could have on guilty white liberals, and apparently so has Walter Mosley. Perhaps the extraordinary acclaim that's greeted each entry in Mosley's Easy Rawlins series of detective novels has to do with the way he shows us what Chandler didn't: black life in Los Angeles during the '40s and '50s. But the books themselves aren't much more than the usual hardboiled fantasy, masochistic and narcissistic in equal measure. Easy is the tough-guy martyr who has to take more than his dose of punishment before meting out retribution. Mosley lingers on the beatings and the pain like a kid who can't keep from poking a loose tooth, and his subtext is pretty obvious: Easy's lickings are symbolic of the spiritual beatings a black man takes every day. And the thugs who dish it out aren't even the worst villains. That honor is reserved for the white (or half-white) women who exist to lure poor black men to their doom. (That's exactly the nonsense Carl Franklin got rid of in his sensational film of Devil In a Blue Dress.)

In the new Gone Fishin' — a series prequel about Easy and his murderous pal Mouse in the backwoods of 1939 Texas — Mosley seems to be aiming for Hemingway and Faulkner. It's a Southern gothic about an innocent made to see the evil of the world as he learns his capabilities and limits. Mouse hires Easy to be his chauffeur on a trip to get money out of Mouse's stepdaddy. Chaos and carnage ensue (Mosley is particularly fond of animal killings, the cheapest way to get a response out of a reader), all of it dense with Hard Life Lessons. "I couldn't live with those people anymore. They were living on the edge of despair ... It was a deadly line we had to walk and the only thing that kept us going was some kind of faith. Either you believed in God or family or love. I didn't believe in any of those things anymore. Maybe I never had."

Do people fall for this stuff because the idea of a black writer of hard-boiled fiction is a novelty, or because that clipped, faux Hemingway prose makes Mosley's phony hard truths go down easier? He may not have it as cushy as Mouse, who boasts of "a hundred women to suck my dick." But a hundred critics to kiss his ass ain't hay. -- Salon

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

A genre-bending author who can move from science-fiction to mysteries, Walter Mosley is perhaps best-known -- and loved -- for his 1940s and ‘50s noir crime novels starring the cool, complex detective Easy Rawlins.

More About the Author

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 3
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4.5 out of 5
Write a Review


Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Like his other novels, this one rates
mystic88, a person who will read anything., 04/13/2006

five stars. Except the scene when they actually go fishing with a gun! I don't know why but that was most disturbing.

Also recommended: I have enjoyed all of his work but less so the sci-fi stuff. I'm sure it's good, I'm just not a sci-fi futuristic kinda gal/

Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 Holds Your Attention
John Ridgle (ridglejw@yahoo.com) , a retired Logistics Manager., 05/28/2002

I'm just becoming a Walter Mosley fan! This is one of the easiest reading and attention holding books I have 'ever' read.

More Customer Reviews