Book Review: Rose Gold, An Easy Rawlins Mystery by Walter Mosley

Our February book this month was an “Easy Rawlins” mystery.  We’ve read several of Walter Mosley’s works over the years and everyone generally looks forward to seeing what our man, Easy (Mosley’s main character) is up to.

Rose Gold was published in 2014. So years ago when we met Easy, it was the late 1940’s. Now Easy has matured and it’s the late 1960’s. Easy is a private investigator and his assignment is to find an heiress named Rosemary Goldsmith (Rose Gold), who may have been kidnapped.  The kidnapper may be an ex-boxer or possibly a revolutionary leader. There are just so many maybes we can handle as we read through the story. In Rose Gold however, one certainty is that Easy is hired by the Los Angeles Police department.

All of Easy’s novels take place primarily in LA, but we also follow him to many other towns and communities around southern California.  He moves smoothly around various ethnic neighborhoods making connections and taking in favors as he follows leads about Rose’s whereabouts.

While Rose is the focus of Easy’s assignment, the innocent young black boxer is the real victim as the police have orders to shoot him on sight.  But even as Easy travels about doing his job, he’s a sitting target for all sorts of police harassment.  (Nothing much has changed in the last 50 years).  Easy’s client is a high-level group of police officials but the cop on the street is none the wiser.  Thus, Easy must refer cops to call his contacts to verify his need to do whatever it is he’s doing.

Mosley handles the racial tension totally in context and makes readers, especially some of a certain generation relive in great detail the language, the clothing, and the changing social scene.  He has an amazing way of telling us about skin color, language and the way a dress fits.

Rose is a Patty Hearst-like character and just like with Patty we are left not quite sure about Rose.  How much of a victim is she?

Our book club members were concerned about the plethora of characters.  A few went back and re-read portions of chapters to keep them all straight.  We also missed Mouse.  Mouse is Easy’s best pal in crime and he really is our favorite in all the other thirteen Easy Rawlins mysteries.  Mouse is fast talking, slick, and doesn’t give a damn about anyone’s life.  But in Rose Gold he’s strangely out of town.  Easy summarizes and closes some of the open questions for us at the very end of the book in a phone conversation with Mouse.

None of the book club members remember this technique in any other novel and we decided we didn’t like it. At a recent book signing in Seattle, Mosely stated he sometimes doesn’t know how a book will turn out. We all agreed we would rather Mosely wrap up the loose ends as part of the novel narrative.

We strongly recommend “Rose Gold.” Our book club meeting was at The Raconteur Restaurant in Third Place books in the Seward Park neighborhood.  It’s the perfect place to have a meeting and discuss our latest read. Hopefully you found this review to be insightful and if so, let us know by leaving us a comment here on our website.

Excerpt from The Best-Laid Plans by Harriet A. Slye

 

Sometimes the day can drag on when you’ve got plans for the evening, and I was having one of those days. It had been a particularly horrendous couple of days, and I was looking forward to Wednesday evening. I was to meet my sister, Althea, and longtime friends Pat and Sheila to attend a reading by a famous author at a local bookstore. Clients had been calling with annoying questions, coworkers had been behaving equally stupidly, and bosses had been making impossible demands. Wednesday had begun as badly as the two previous days; this job and these people were working my last nerve!

The day ended and, boy, was I ready for a relaxing and pleasant evening with friends. It had been a long time since the four of us had been able to get together, and tonight was going to be a treat.

We expected a crowd for the seven-thirty reading, so we decided to meet at Anderson’s Bookstore around five so we could get good parking places there. Then we would take one car to Sammy’s for drinks and hors d’oeuvres.

I was the first to arrive and found a parking spot across the street. I parked in two spaces so whoever drove to Sammy’s could park in front of or behind me when we returned. My sister, Althea, was next, and we waited for Sheila and Pat, who were notoriously late for everything. When they finally arrived, we exchanged hugs and greetings and headed for Sammy’s Soul ’n’ Spirits.

Sammy’s is a small but popular restaurant that doubles as the local watering hole on weekends. Professional and nonprofessional African Americans meet there after work for drinks, food, and conversation. During the day, old-timers gather to have a drink, play dominoes, and solve the problems of the world. It has been a restaurant for years but has been through several owners. The area was undergoing much-needed renovations. It had become a dangerous place at night, with gangs in the area; but the face lift was looking good, and people were returning to the neighborhood. Sammy’s was on the ground floor of an office building in the central business district. We chose Sammy’s because it was close to the bookstore and none of us had been there in ages. It was the only soul food restaurant around that could accommodate more than fifteen people at a time.

We arrived at about five thirty. As we entered, we noticed that some remodeling was being done. There were several groups of people scattered throughout the restaurant, having drinks and talking. The bar was straight ahead, but we could hear raucous laughter, so we opted for the restaurant. There was a table for four in the corner, and we quickly claimed it. After scanning the room for familiar faces and feeling fairly confident that we hadn’t missed anyone we knew, we began to chat among ourselves, looked at the menu, and decided on drinks. The atmosphere was light; people were talking, laughing, drinking, and having a good time; and we were anxious to join in.

A full twenty minutes later, the waitress, whose name tag identified her as Brenda, finally sauntered over. Althea was discussing her impending laser eye surgery when Brenda chimed in, saying, “I know what you mean, girl. My eyes are so bad I have to wear contacts and glasses!”

Pat’s eyes were rolling, and I was holding my breath. I knew how we could be if people insinuated themselves into our conversations.

Sheila muttered, “As long as you can see well enough to write our orders down right.” It was going to be that kind of evening.

Find out what happens in The Best Laid by Plans by Harriet A. Slye by getting your copy of Life Matters by The BookClub Seattle today!

Ready to Unfold by Mona Lake Jones

 

Stand back and watch me

I’m getting ready to unfold!

I’ve decided to let my spirit go free

I’m ready to become the woman I was meant to be.

I’ve either been somebody’s daughter, mother or wife

And now it’s time for me to take charge of my life.

I’ve been pondering all this time trying to decide just who I am

At first I thought it depended on whether I had a man.

Then I thought that simply just because

Others had more seniority; they could decide who I was.

I played all the roles that were expected and

I seldom asked why I’ve had my wings closed up,

but now I’m ready to fly

I’ve been awakened and I finally see the light

I’m about to make some changes

and set a few things right.

With my new attitude and the knowledge I possess

I might create a whole new world order

and clean up all this mess!

Stand back and watch me

I’m just getting ready to unfold!

Mona Lake Jones The Color of Culture II

 

To read more quality African American fiction by The BookClub Seattle, get your copy of Life Matters, A Collection of Short Stories.

Excerpt from Dessert by Carol-Flanagan-Frank from Life Matters by The BookClub Seattle

Cheryl knew she was taking a risk when she met him. You know what I mean. A little voice inside whispers a warning as you size up a situation with a casual glance. But Brandon was so enticing; she threw away all caution and moved in at full speed.

Cheryl Kincaid was fresh from graduate school at Rutgers University when she moved back to her hometown of Philadelphia. With a master’s degree, an eight-year-old son, and a messy divorce, she was rebuilding her life. She figured it would be healthier for her son, Jamil, to be raised around family and better for her to be close to loyal, old friends than to remain around the hostility and negativity of her ex-husband’s family.

When Cheryl’s oldest and dearest friend, Diana, suggested she attend the wedding of a former classmate, she had in mind to introduce Cheryl to Perry Swanson, an up-and-coming real estate broker. Perry was also a single parent, raising ten-year-old twin girls. But when Cheryl arrived at the reception, the first thing she spied was the fine chocolate frame of Brandon James Washington. He was lounging against the bar and appeared to be engaged in an animated conversation with two of the groomsmen. The cream silk shirt and matching linen slacks complemented his dark velvet skin perfectly. Cheryl’s eagle eye quickly noted the expensive clothing, the large gold chain bracelet on his right wrist, the diamond stud in his left earlobe, and the absence of any rings on his left hand.

Diana tried to steer Cheryl through the crowd toward a group of friends sitting near the dance f loor. But Cheryl stopped dead in her tracks. “I want to meet him!”

“Who are you talking about, girl?”

“That fine hunk o’ man near the bar. Who is he?”

“Oh, that’s Brandon Washington, the most eligible bachelor around here—and he knows it. There are more women chasing him than you want to compete with. You’ll have to take a number.”

But Cheryl dismissed the warning, and like a bee is drawn to honey, she buzzed over in the direction of Mr. GQ.

Read more in Life Matters by The BookClub Seattle!