![]() Mosley returns here to doing what he does best: setting the pain and pleasure of individual lives, lived mostly in L.A.’s black community, within an instantly recognizable historical moment and allowing the two to feed off one another.” - Booklist makes Easy such an enduring figure and his comeback so welcome.” - The Houston Chronicle “The mix of hardboiled detective narrative and social philosophizing on African American life. Little Green more than lives up to the high standard the author has set.” Taken together, they are nothing less than a history of race relations in post-World War II Los Angeles. “Rawlins himself is at the heart of the series’ appeal: a well-read auto-didact and man of action, father of found children and spouse to no one who sometimes sees his double life, divided between the land of law and the underworld.” He’s a thinker and a polemicist and not just a mystery guy.” - Los Angeles Times “Mosley’s project, like James Ellroy’s, like Chester Himes’s, has always been to use the genre to explore history and racial politics. “Mosley is never better than when he’s got a juicy cut of history to chew on, and the hippie counterculture of the late ’60s perfectly feeds his style.” Mosley writes mysteries, but they’re also literary jewels and priceless social history.” “Faster, smarter and more gutsy than any of its predecessors. ![]() “Mosley writes like a slumming angel, and his evocation of mid-century L.A. ![]()
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