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BLONDE FAITH
Walter Mosley
Grand Central Publishing
Mystery
Hardcover: 9780316734592
Paperback: 9780446617901
It is somewhat of a surprise to come to the realization that BLONDE FAITH is Walter Mosley’s 10th Easy Rawlins thriller. It seems there have been more, far more. Rawlins quietly became an icon even as Mosley became both a role model for minority writers and an argument against giving African-American authors a separate but equal genre classification that intentionally distinguishes their work and unintentionally marginalizes it from a larger potential audience.
This is easily the best book in the series, which screams to be read in one sitting thanks to its flowing, unstoppable narrative. Mosley’s storylines have always reflected the complexity of the life of his protagonist, a black man living in the southwest United States in the mid-20th century. With this new novel, Mosley streamlines things a bit, keeping the plot basic without sacrificing the richness of the tale.
BLONDE FAITH takes place in Los Angeles in 1967, where a city and political power structure remain uneasy in the aftermath of the Watts riots. Rawlins’s life, somewhat turbulent even in the best of times, becomes more so when his two best friends suddenly go missing. Christmas Black, a Vietnam veteran, drops off his adoptive daughter at Rawlins’s house without warning or explanation and is apparently on the run. Meanwhile, Rawlins’s friend Mouse is being sought by the police for murder, and Rawlins is convinced that, due to Mouse’s longstanding antagonistic relationship with the police, the authorities will not be taking any prisoners.
Even as Rawlins begins the dual tasks of finding Christmas and rescuing Mouse, he finds out that Bonnie, his longtime but estranged lover, is on the verge of marrying another man. This knowledge haunts and distracts him, even as he begins tracing Christmas’s whereabouts and slowly but surely learns that the man who Mouse is accused of murdering is in fact alive and well and on the run himself. Rawlins comes to realize that his best shot at saving Mouse is locating the man Mouse supposedly murdered.
What is most interesting about this book is the manner in which Mosley quietly demonstrates to his audience (if not to Rawlins himself) that the things that have the potential to bring Rawlins his best chance at happiness are in his immediate grasp.
The conclusion is easily the most unique and shocking of any featured in Mosley’s work thus far. Fairly unambiguous but leaving just a bit of wiggle room for a sequel, this is sure to be one of Mosley’s most controversial novels to date, particularly among his longtime fans. It is for this reason, and all that comes before, that BLONDE FAITH is a must-read.
--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
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