Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Mosley returns to issues of race

- OLINE H. COGDILL

Down the River Unto the Sea Walter Mosley Mulholland Books

Few mystery writers can examine issues of race — how it divides and binds people — as clearly and unflinchin­gly as Walter Mosley, who returns to this theme in his stand-alone novel Down the River Unto the Sea.

Racism, corruption and injustice flow well in this novel, which introduces former NYPD Det. Joe King Oliver, now the owneropera­tor of King Detective Service in the Brooklyn Heights neighbourh­ood of New York City. King, as he prefers to be called, spent several months in jail on phoney assault charges before the case was dropped without an explanatio­n. That was 13 years ago, and the arrest ended his police career and his marriage. It also “broke” him because of the frequent beatings and violence he endured from other prisoners and guards. Except for his 17-year-old daughter, Aja-Denise, he lives an isolated life. “Human connection only reminded me of what I could lose,” he says.

King is jolted when he receives a letter from the woman who accused him of assault, saying crooked cops forced her to bring the charges. King wasn’t a popular detective, but doesn’t know what he did to incur such hatred. He’s barely begun to look into what happened to him when he is asked to look into the case of A Free Man, the name militant journalist Leonard Compton calls himself. Compton is on death row for shooting two police officers though he claimed it was self-defence.

King ’s investigat­ions take him on a journey to undergroun­d bars, after-hours nightclubs and remote diners. Along the way, he unleashes a maelstrom of violence. He’s helped by Melquarth Frost, a vicious career criminal who hasn’t forgotten that King once saved his life.

Examining how discrimina­tion and prejudice affect AfricanAme­ricans is right in Mosley’s wheelhouse. The author doesn’t miss a beat weaving this into the gritty plot of Down the River Unto the Sea.

While the plot soars, King doesn’t land as completely formed. Mosley’s Easy Rawlins rules Devil in a Blue Dress from the first page and features in 14 novels all told. Leonid McGill (five novels), Fearless Jones (three novels) and Socrates Fortlow (three novels) are also memorable Mosley series characters. King is off to a good start, but needs a bit more sculpting before he reaches the level of Mosley’s others.

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