Showing posts with label hardboiled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hardboiled. Show all posts

The Drift Review

The Drift
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Book Title: The Drift
Reviewed by: LottaHoney
Amazon Rating: 5
APOOO Rating: 5
A Tour de Force of A Novel! A Sublime Page-Turner!
There is a rich American tradition of riding the rails. Even I, as a child, had adventurous dreams of running away on a railway and experiencing moonlit campfires and starry-night talks with hobos. John Ridley's The Drift illustrates the flip of the coin and the underbelly of drugs and terror on the turf of today's freight train riding hobos.
Charles Harmon, an upper-middle class Black tax lawyer, resides in Sunny California. Charles is a possessor of the American dream replete with a BMW in the driveway, a palatial suburban home, a gardener, Cayman Island vacations, and a beautiful wife with a new-born baby harboring a crystal blue, 3rd eye in his cheek - disturbing images that his slowly deteriorating, demented mind envisions. He abandons all of the accouterments of the American dream for the beckoning call of The Drift...the magnetic pull of The Drift...the sensation of The Drift, the gentle lull and roll of the trains on the tracks.
The protagonist, Charles Harmon, descends into an underworld of train-hopping hobos with tags such as Frypan Jack and Slow Motion Shorty. Charles discovers, "Freedom. Freedom is what the rails are for". Charles dies and experiences a rebirth as Brain Nigger Charlie and is indoctrinated into the world of steel corridors learning to `catch-out' and ride the rails.
Old and tired Chocolate Walt becomes the mentor to Brain Nigger Charlie and his newly acquired friends - the fierce and loyal George Plimpton and his potent and clinging lady friends, Lady K and Lady E.
The novel's plot heightens as Chocolate Walt engages Brain Nigger Charlie to ride the High Line in search of his wayward, runaway niece Corina Leslie.
The High Line is inhabited and controlled by the Pacific Northwest FTRA - Freight Train Riders of America or the original "F*$^ the Reagan Administration" - a vicious gang of psychopathic, racist, drug-trafficking, train-hopping hobos that have commandeered the freight train of America leaving a trail of corpses in its wake.
Brain Nigger Charlie attempts to redeem himself by valiantly searching for his friend's niece, Corina Leslie. As his search begins, amid many hits and misses, this novel takes you on a roller coaster ride with multiple bends, unexpected twists, and curves. As you succulently savor each page, the suspense is earth shaking, glass breaking, and unsettling... a wonderful and incredible tour de force of images with exact and precise descriptive images.
You are sure to begin a train ride on the Freight Trains of American into Pure Terror - in the capable hands of John Ridley.
Reviewed by LottaHoney
APOOO BookClub

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Gone Fishin': Featuring an Original Easy Rawlins Short Story "Smoke" (Easy Rawlins Mysteries) Review

Gone Fishin': Featuring an Original Easy Rawlins Short Story Smoke (Easy Rawlins Mysteries)
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Great detective story writers can rise to being solid novelists. Ross MacDonald was clearly in this category. With Gone Fishin', Walter Mosley has attained that distinction in a new way -- he has gone into a new fictional genre.
Although this novel has the usual crime overlay, it is really a novel about coming of age in the South as a black person before the days of integration. With few books available on this subject, I suspect that Mosley may have set the standard for other authors to meet.
For me, a lot of the charm of the Easy Rawlins stories is their historical setting in the more prejudiced days of the past. How does an intelligent, honorable black person deal with this? The stories are interesting for both what they say about society and for the great plots and character development.
This book, a prequel to the others in the series, does the same, but in a different setting -- far a way from Southern California.
I found it to be an excellent gothic novel, and encourage you to read it as such. If you open this book expecting another Easy Rawlins detective story, you may be disappointed. On the other hand, if you leave yourself open to what you find here, you will probably be rewarded. Moseley's fans need to live up to his talent, and follow him where his skills take him.
If you have not read the Walter Mosley books before, I suggest you start with this one. You'll make more sense out of the rest of the series. You'll also be less likely to be disturbed by the shift in genre. Anyone who enjoys this book will find the detective novels to be an easy follow on.

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