5.01.2013

Review - Black Betty





Home meant that everybody already knew what you could do and if you did the slightest little thing different they’d laugh you right down into a hole. You lived in that hole. Festered in it. After a while you either accepted your hole or you got out of it (31) 
In this Easy Rawlins mystery we find Easy living with his son Jesus, and other adopted child, Feather. In the heat of an L.A summer, they’re scraping by, but they’re making it. Easy’s ready to settle down with a regular ‘9 to 5’ and abandon the underground private eye practice. He’s ready to get out of his hole because his family needs the consistency and safety. Of course, his desire to do so is blocked by another mystery. This time Easy has to find Black Betty, a woman from his past.

Read the rest of the review on the new site for - A Morose Bookshelf

2 comments:

  1. I admit it. I now have Ram Jam's version of Black Betty stuck in my head.

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    Replies
    1. Whoa, black betty -- bam-a-lam.

      I wonder if Mosley thought of this song at all when he wrote this story...

      Thanks for visiting!


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