Devil in a Blue Dress written by Walter Mosley’, a review.

Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley

I had read only one other crime novel featuring a black hero, Reginald Hill’s, Blood Sympathy. As far as I can tell Reginald Hill was white. Blood Sympathy is set in Hill’s version of Luton England and was first published in 1985, Devil in a Blue Dress, 1990. Blood Sympathy’s, Joe Six Smith and Devil in a Blue Dress’s, Easy Rawlins have both lost their jobs forcing career changes onto them. Similarities end there.

Walter Mosley is a year younger than me, neither of us, at 72 and 73 years old respectively, were alive in 1948. Mr Mosley no doubt had family to tell him how things were then. From what I am told by friends who have visited the States more recently, the attitudes and prejudices mentioned within Devil in a Blue Dress haven’t changed much and certainly haven’t gone away.

The author has no doubt had his thinking about Los Angeles, at the time of the book coloured by contemporary literature and films made in that period. In terms of American detective crime fiction Raymond Chandler is probably a go-to point of reference, both in time and location. That most of Chandler’s novels have been made into films, with Playback the only exception, reinforces this view.

Devil in a Blue Dress, is written in the first person, that of Ezekiel Rawlins, “Easy” Rawlins, the hero. Recently unemployed, war veteran, Easy is engaged to search for a white woman Daphne Monet, who is known to frequent the coloured jazz clubs and bars of Los Angeles. Easy’s, employer, Dewitt Albright, a white man is introduced to Easy by his bar owner friend and ex boxer, Joppy.

In 1948 as many places were segregated and Albright feels he can’t search for Daphne himself, because of this colour bar existing at the time. Easy knows the places where Daphne might be found, is familiar with the people who frequent them and is of course the right skin colour to visit these places without a problem. Devil in a Blue Dress shares characteristics of US detective fiction of the period but the perspective from someone of black ethnicity is different. The body count is high, the plot is interesting the ending, unpredictable.

I thought Devil in a Blue Dress was an excellent read and I really enjoyed it.

5 responses to this post.

  1. Cathy Cade's avatar

    Clearly another one to add to my tbr list. The pile isn’t going down very fast right now.

    Reply

  2. purplesandyh's avatar

    I too have several piles of books to read. I am halfway through a few, really struggling with them. I’m waiting to give myself permission to give up. I usually enjoy your recommendations.

    Reply

  3. fenlandphil's avatar

    Thank you, Sandra. I’m reading a really good book at the moment, A Shot in the Dark by Lynne Truss. I bought it at Niche Comics Bookshop during Independent Bookshop Week, a blog post and review will follow once I have read it. I don’t expect it to be very long before I finish reading it.

    Reply

  4. Gwen M. Plano's avatar

    Posted by Gwen M. Plano on July 22, 2024 at 1:24 pm

    Thank you for sharing your review. It sounds like a great read. Like the other responders, my reading list is overwhelming. But…this book sounds like one I’d enjoy.

    Reply

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