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Down the river unto the sea  Cover Image E-book E-book

Down the river unto the sea

Mosley, Walter (author.).

Summary: Ten years after serving time at Rikers Island for assault, Joe King Oliver, an ex-NYPD investigator working as a private detective, receives a note from a woman who admits she was paid to frame him, compelling him to find out who on the police force wanted him out. He also agrees to help a radical black journalist accused of killing two on-duty police officers who had been abusing their badges to traffic in drugs and prostitutes in the city's poorest neighborhoods. The two cases intertwine, exposing a pattern of corruption and brutality wielded against black men, women, and children whose lives the law detroyed.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780316509657
  • ISBN: 0316509655
  • ISBN: 9780316510714
  • ISBN: 0316510718
  • ISBN: 9780316509640
  • ISBN: 0316509647
  • ISBN: 9780316439985
  • ISBN: 0316439983
  • ISBN: 9780316417531
  • ISBN: 031641753X
  • ISBN: 9780316417532
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (322 pages)
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Mulholland Books/Little, Brown and Company, 2018.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A novel"--Jacket.
Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: African American detectives -- Fiction
Private investigators -- Fiction
Judicial error -- Fiction
Private investigators -- New York (State) -- New York -- Fiction
Ex-police officers -- Fiction
Police corruption -- New York (State) -- New York -- Fiction
Race relations -- Fiction
Fathers and daughters -- Fiction
Police corruption -- Fiction
FICTION -- African American -- Mystery & Detective
FICTION -- Mystery & Detective -- Private Investigators
Race relations
Private investigators
Judicial error
Fathers and daughters
Police corruption
New York (State) -- New York
African American detectives
Ex-police officers
Genre: Thrillers (Fiction)
Fiction.
Detective and mystery fiction.
Electronic books.
Suspense fiction.
Mystery fiction.
Thrillers (Fiction)
Detective and mystery fiction.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 November #2
    *Starred Review* Since Mosley launched his Easy Rawlins series to universal acclaim with Devil in a Blue Dress (1990), he has published more than 50 books across multiple genres. Now he begins a new series, starring PI Joe King Oliver, and it rekindles some of the remarkable energy that drove the early Rawlins novels. Oliver was an NYPD detective until he was framed by parties unknown for sexual assault and wound up at Rikers, looking at serious time. His one remaining friend on the force gets Joe released and sets him up with a PI agency, where Joe has been toiling in desultory fashion for the last decade, supported at the agency by his teen daughter. Two new cases change everything. First, the woman Joe was accused of assaulting contacts him, admitting to taking part in the frame-up and prompting Joe to investigate his own case. Meanwhile, he takes on another case every bit as politically incendiary as his own: helping a radical African American journalist escape the electric chair. Mosley writes with great power here about themes that have permeated his work: institutional racism, political corruption, and the ways that both of these issues affect not only society at large but also the inner lives of individual men and women. And he has created a new hero in Joe Oliver with the depth and vulnerability to sustain what readers will hope becomes a new series. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With the Easy Rawlins series, though still strong, showing some signs of aging, it's the perfect moment for Mosley to unveil an exciting new hero and a series set in the present and confronting the issues that drive today's headlines. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2018 March
    An imperfect hero for turbulent times

    Taut, brutal and filled with author Walter Mosley's trademark mix of imperfect winners and losers, Down the River Unto the Sea introduces a new hero: the complicated and endearing New York detective Joe King Oliver.

    It's a name that may catch the eye of Louis Armstrong fans: Band leader Joe "King" Oliver famously taught the jazz legend. Three pages into this fast-moving jazz solo of a noir, Mosley's riffs on contemporary life will have you as hooked as Armstrong's fans were on his mind-bending improvisations a century ago.

    "To write about someone who has the name of Louis Armstrong's mentor is . . . kind of wonderful. That was just fun," Mosley says. "[Joe] may be around for a while, who knows."

    Sixty-six-year-old Mosley, who began writing at age 34, burst out of the gate with his 1990 Shamus Award-winning debut, Devil in a Blue Dress. Set in the Watts neighborhood in late-1940s Los Angeles and featuring the hard-drinking private eye Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins, Devil also became a successful film featuring Denzel Washington as Easy and Don Cheadle as his sidekick, Mouse. The series, now 14 books deep, has worked its way to 1968 with Charcoal Joe, which was released in 2016.

    Mosley readily admits his compelling and timeless examination of the African-American experience has benefited as much from timing as technique. "One of the bad things about America, and I benefit from it, is that whenever you're telling a real story about a black person or a group of black people in America, it probably hasn't been written," Mosley says. "Easy Rawlins is that detective."

    However, Mosley says, "It's not like it hasn't been done." He acknowledges his thematic contemporaries, Chester Himes, author of Cotton Comes to Harlem, and Ishmael Reed, author of The Last Days of Louisiana Red. "But Easy Rawlins was a new character, and Mouse was a new character, and Leonid McGill was a new character. It's so interesting for me, writing these stories."

    And Joe is definitely a new character. On the inspiration behind Joe's backstory, Mosley says, "There are so many conflicts between authority and people who have been disenfranchised in some way." Mosley muses that Down the River Unto the Sea reflects a broad view of marginalized Americans. "How does one live in a world where half the people in prison are people of color, and they don't represent nearly that percentage of the population?"

    Recent conversations around racial prejudice in both the justice system and media inspired Mosley to create a character forced to walk between authority, as a detective and former police officer, and guilt, as a man falsely charged with sexual assault.

    When we meet Joe King, he is depressed and ruminating on a host of conflicts in his sleepy PI agency. The former detective was one of the NYPD's top investigators until he was dispatched to arrest an alluring car thief. When, much to Joe's surprise, his investigation led to a sexual encounter with the woman in question, he found himself framed, arrested and sentenced to Rikers Island, where he spent nine months.

    "Joe is a pretty good guy in a world that's not quite up to his standards."

    In the decade since Joe's near-fatal stay in Rikers Island, he has had to rebuild his life and reclaim his sexuality after it was used against him. Mosley explains, "For me, there is no conflict between wanting to do what's right and having a healthy libido."

    The dark cloud surrounding Joe's past begins to lift when he receives a mysterious card from the woman who ended his career. Suddenly, his worst suspicions are confirmed—the shadowy forces who moved so effectively to frame and nearly kill him intend to complete the job.

    Mosley says,"Joe is a pretty good guy in a world that's not quite up to his standards." Once he discovers the truth, Joe vows to clear his name with the help of his teenage daughter and office assistant, Aja-Denise.

    Long the creator of hard-boiled and hard-loving detectives, Mosley also admits that gender and equality issues have impacted character relationships in Down the River Unto the Sea.

    One of those relationships is Joe's loving—if sometimes misguided—bond with his daughter, who is grappling with her own issues even as Joe does his best to protect her from the cruel realities of the world. Mosley says, "The thing that he does right is, he loves her. And that's what she needs."

    Joe's quest for truth also involves his violent yet loyal partner, Melquarth "Mel" Frost, and an unexpected client—Frankie Figures, aka A Free Man, a black militant journalist condemned to death for killing two police officers under similarly suspect circumstances. According to A Free Man's friends and followers, the journalist had discovered cops trafficking in drugs and prostitution in some of New York's roughest neighborhoods.

    As Joe begins to uncover what really happened, Mosley paints a complex portrait of law and order. "You're living in a world that's moving on, it's leaving most people behind, and the thing to figure out is, what does that mean? Where are we going? And I don't know."

    Assisted by Aja-Denise, Joe and Mel blaze through the boroughs, collecting clues from Mosley's fully drawn and delightfully unlikely assemblage of characters, with two lives hanging in the balance.

    With all the conspiracies, relationships and self-discovery lining the pages of Down the River Unto the Sea, Mosley admits enjoying a character willing to bend the rules.

    "The mystery of it is inside Joe himself: What will he do? How does he solve—and fail to solve—these mysteries that he's faced with?"

    Readers will discover that Joe isn't afraid to flout the norm. "I think it goes far out of the realm of the expected in the same way that Chester Himes does . . . because we feel trapped by rules. To be able to go beyond that trap is kind of wonderful to me."

    Mosley's mysteries may belong on a shelf alongside Himes and Reed—but some critics argue differently. Mosley's work has been drawn into an unlikely debate over whether he qualifies as a Jewish writer.

    "There was a big online argument about whether or not I was a Jewish writer," says Mosley, who explains that he is not religious. "My mother was Jewish, so I'm a Jewish writer. That looks fine. I was never going to get involved in that argument. It's hard enough to write books. I save that for my novels."

    In addition to his daily writing routine, Mosley spends time in the writers' room of director John Singleton's FX series, "Snowfall," and he's also working on a new TV series based on his Leonid McGill books and developing a film version of his stand-alone The Man in My Basement with director William Oldroyd. Mosley also continues to tap his passion for jazz as he works on developing a musical based on Devil in a Blue Dress.

    All this from a guy who considers himself a man out of time. "I'm very old fashioned," Mosley muses, "certainly not of this century. . . . The way I approach writing goes back to the 19th century. I've published 55 books, and I'm still writing them. I have three yet to come out. That's what I do. So if you want to know what I think, read the books."

     

    This article was originally published in the March 2018 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Author photo by Marcia Wilson.

    Copyright 2018 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2017 November #2
    Mosley (Charcoal Joe, 2016, etc.) begins what looks to be a new series with a protagonist whose territory covers New York City's outer boroughs—and, yes, that means Staten Island, too.Joe King Oliver was an ace investigator with the NYPD until his roving eye helped him get framed for sexual assault. "Trouble ambushed me with my pants down and my nose open," as he explains to an acquaintance. He is kicked off the force and thrown into Riker's Island, where he faces the kind of demeaning and vicious attacks a jailed cop would expect from inmates until a stretch in solitary confinement and an abrupt release save his life. Eleven years later, King (as some of his friends call him) is making a living as a private eye based on Brooklyn's Montague Street when his mundane existence is jolted by two events: a letter from a woman admitting she was coerced into setting him up years before and a case involving a radical black activist who's been sentenced to death for killing two c orrupt, abusive officers. King sees serendipity in the convergence of these two cases, believing that if he could exonerate the activist, it'd be a way of finally exorcising his rueful memories. His dual inquiries carry him from glittering Wall Street offices to seedy alleyways all over the city, and he encounters double-dealing lawyers, shady cops, drug addicts, hired killers, and prostitutes along the way. The only people King can count on are his loyal and precocious 17-year-old daughter, Aja-Denise, and an equally loyal but tightly wound career criminal named Melquarth "Mel" Frost, whose capacity for violence will remind Mosley devotees of Mouse, the homicidal thug who either helps or hinders Easy Rawlins in the author's first and best-known series. Indeed, so many aspects of this novel are reminiscent of other Mosley books that it tempts one to wonder whether he's stretching his resources a little thin. But ultimately it's Mosley's signature style—rough-hewn, rhyt h mic, and lyrical—that makes you ready and eager for whatever he's serving up. It's getting to be a bigger blues band on Mosley's stage, with Joe King Oliver now sitting in with Easy Rawlins and Leonid McGill. But as long as it sounds sweet and smoky, let the good times roll. Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2017 September #2

    In this latest from Mystery Writers Grand Master Mosley, a stand-alone and possible series launch, top NYPD investigator Joe King Oliver is framed by bad guys on the force and ends up at Rikers. Now he runs his own agency with teenage daughter Aja-Denise. When a woman confesses that she was paid to sell him down the river, he becomes his own client, determined to find out who wanted him off the force and why. With a 100,000-copy first printing.

    Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2017 December #1

    In Mosley's (Charcoal Joe) engaging stand-alone, Joe King Oliver, a once stellar detective for the NYPD, now runs his own agency in Brooklyn, confronting crooked cops, deceitful bankers, and cowardly lawyers. He diligently seeks justice both for his client, a black civil rights activist accused of killing two dirty policemen, and also for himself, as he struggles to understand why his fellow officers framed him for assaulting a crafty car thief. After serving ten years in solitary at Rikers Island, Oliver lives a quiet life with his daughter Aja-Denise, when a note from a woman the police used to frame him triggers his search to determine who on the force wanted to destroy him. Assisted by Melquarth Frost, a brilliant sociopath, Oliver stalks an underworld of crime and deceit, while shielding his daughter from the filth. VERDICT Mosley fans will welcome another imaginative page-turner from a mystery grand master. [See Prepub Alert, 8/28/17.]—Jerry P. Miller. Cambridge, MA

    Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2017 November #2

    Former NYPD detective Joe King Oliver, now the owner-operator of King Detective Service, investigates two cases of gross injustice in this excellent standalone from MWA Grand Master Mosley (Charcoal Joe and 13 other Easy Rawlins novels). Thirteen years earlier, Oliver was convicted on bogus assault charges, which ended his police career and his marriage. He spent nine months in jail before the charges were dropped and he was released without explanation. Oliver now learns that a crooked cop was behind the frame. Meanwhile, he is approached by Willa Portman, an intern for the lawyer representing Leonard Compton, a militant journalist who's on death row for the murder of two policemen three years earlier. Portman says the killings were self-defense. Oliver, who faces a corrupt world with unflinching honesty and ruthlessness, enlists the aid of Melquarth Frost, a hardened career criminal, to even the odds in both cases. The novel's dedication—to Malcolm, Medgar, and Martin—underlines the difference that one man can make in the fight for justice. Agent: Gloria Loomis, Watkins Loomis Agency. (Feb.)

    Copyright 2017 Publishers Weekly.
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