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  • Devil in a Blue Dress
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4.4 out of 5 stars
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Devil in a Blue Dress

Devil in a Blue Dress

byWalter Mosley
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Mal Warwick
4.0 out of 5 starsA promising beginning to the series
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on March 16, 2021
In 1948, the first In-N-Out Burger opened in Los Angeles, a harbinger of the car culture that would come to dominate the region. Farmland divided the city from the town of Santa Monica, and the population then fell short of two million. (It was only with the 1950 census that L.A. surpassed Detroit as the nationโ€™s fourth largest city.) During those post-war years, the LAPD was notorious for rampant corruption, police brutality, and unrestrained racism. Itโ€™s fitting, then, that Walter Mosley chose to set the first Easy Rawlins detective novel in that time and place. Devil in a Blue Dress is, above all, an unvarnished portrait of African-American life in Los Angeles in the aftermath of World War II. But in a larger sense, the book provides a window on all the messiness of a great city in the making.

Easy Rawlinsโ€™ backstory

The authorโ€™s perspective

Everybodyโ€™s favorite fictional African-American detective โ€œwas born poor in 1920 Louisiana and orphaned by the time he was eight. A black child of Southern Louisiana, he jumped a boxcar that took him to 5th Ward, Houston, Texas. He is self-educated in everything from sewing to English literature. Easy is a heroic veteran of World War II and an undeniable victim of American racism; but heโ€™s not the type to give up or to even back down.โ€ Thus Walter Mosley introduces his protagonist in a preface to the 30th edition of Devil in a Blue Dress. This venerable novel was the first of the fifteen published to date in the Easy Rawlins series.

The man describes himself in this first Easy Rawlins detective novel

And here is how Easy introduces himself: โ€œI was used to white people by 1948. I had spent five years with white men, and women, from Africa to Italy, through Paris, and into the Fatherland itself. I ate with them and slept with them, and I killed enough blue-eyed young men to know that they were just as afraid to die as I was.โ€ Thus, like so many African-American men who served during World War II, he returned to the United States with high hopes that American society would change as he had changed. Knowing all the while that it wouldnโ€™t.

โ€œEasy is an American heroโ€

Mosley elaborates in his Introduction to this first Easy Rawlins detective novel that describes how the ex-soldier became a detective. โ€œEasy is an American hero. He does not expect recognition, acceptance, or any sense of equality in the land that defines his experience as something other. He knows that he will never be seen as equal to those that believe equality is weighted by color and class, gender and belief. But Easy doesnโ€™t care how he is seen or perceived; as long as they know he is blessed with the willingness to fight back, then the rules begin to tip, ever so slightly, in his favor.โ€

The makings of a private detective

As Devil in a Blue Dress opens, Easy Rawlins has just lost his job, and heโ€™s now broke. The mortgage payment on the little house he purchased after the war is coming due. But a friend introduces him to an imposing white man named DeWitt Albright, who promises to fix the problem. Albright wants to pay Easy $100โ€”more than a thousand dollars todayโ€”to find a missing young woman for a client of his. And that money would keep him in his house for several months.

Although Easy smells trouble and is reluctant to take on the job, heโ€™s desperate and relents. And this decision leads him willy-nilly into a long series of violent episodes that leave bodies strewn throughout Los Angeles. Along the way, as again and again Easy finds himself looking for people who do not want to be found, he decides to become a private detective. And, yes, he solves his mortgage problem.

Mosley writes with spare prose and a deep appreciation for the cadences and diversity of the African-American community. He builds suspense steadily, all the way to a shattering conclusion.

About the author

Walter Mosley (born 1952) is the author of dozens of novels, including the fifteen published to date in the Easy Rawlins series. His more than sixty books also include two other series of mysteries and three science fiction novels as well as five nonfiction books and a slew of other work. Devil in a Blue Dress was his first book and remains the best known, in part because of the 1995 film adaptation starring Denzel Washington. Mosleyโ€™s mother was Jewish, his father African-American; he was an only child. Although he was born and raised in California, he moved to New York City in 1981. He now divides his time between Brooklyn and Los Angeles.
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joel wing
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 starsOverall fun read w/blacks in postwar Los Angeles being the backdrop but with some flaws
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 1, 2020
Devil In A Blue Dress was the first mystery by Walter Mosely to feature his favorite character Easy Rawlins. This initial release in the series is not the greatest, but it is definitely enjoyable.

The Easy Rawlins character was based upon the Second Great migration when thousands of African Americans traveled from the outer south to California for war jobs. Thatโ€™s symbolized by Easy coming from Houston, Texas. California offered some of the highest paying jobs in America and the employers did not discriminate. That enabled many black families to become middle class like Easy who was a home owner. His house is his pride and joy and symbolizes achieving the California dream. Unfortunately, when the war ended blacks were the first fired, which led to a steady decline in the community over the following decades. Hence, Rawlins just lost his job at an aircraft factory and is in crisis looking for money to keep his house. The theme of blacks and race is always brought up throughout the story.

That sets up the plot as Easy is approached by a mysterious and dangerous man named Dewitt Albright who wants Easy to help him find a woman named Daphne. This leads to an ever growing number of dead bodies, betrayal, twists and turns, and a very dark secret about one of the characterโ€™s history. The police want to find someone, anyone to blame for the murders, especially after a white man is found dead and Easy might become the scapegoat. Thatโ€™s the good part of the story.

The one part that doesnโ€™t quite work is when Easy and Daphne hook up. Mosely wrote some really weird parts during that sequence. That doesnโ€™t ultimately distract from the overall story, but the author really could have done a better job.

In the end, the story comes down to figuring out who killed who, and discovering what Daphneโ€™s story was all about as she is the Devil In A Blue Dress. Overall, itโ€™s a very quick and fun read.
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From the United States

JReader
5.0 out of 5 stars Didn't want to put the book down!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on December 9, 2018
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I didn't want to put the book down. I came here from the movie; of course you can tell that from previous reviews of Easy Rawlins. And you always think that the book will be better than the movie. And it was and wasn't. Guess both were great. Initially, I thought I was reading the movie and then subtle differences presented themselves. ย Easy meets Albright at Joppyโ€™s bar. True. He's hired to find Daphne Monet. No difference there. Coretta James. Frank Green? That's where the subtle differences start. Frank Greenโ€™s name keeps coming up. I know why but the book weaves it much better. More detail. And then the Mouse shows up and you can tell that Easy loves the guy but really wants no parts of him. He's that friend you love but hate to have around. Gets you into trouble. The kind of trouble that's burdensome but entertaining. So it got to a point that I couldn't put the book down. Even though I essentially knew what was going to happen from the movie. The book just took it deeper.

I loved the wit. The voice in Easy's head that he argues with is hilarious. Mouse answering the phone (you'll see) is hilarious. And then there are the themes that become the making of a great franchise. Easy is a black man in 50s LA, dealing with racism, sexism, oppression and depression. And he wants to lead a normal life. But how can you? How can any of us and attempt to rise above it all?

On to book 2.
17 people found this helpful
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Jeff F
3.0 out of 5 stars Well-written, so-so as a detective story.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on January 17, 2017
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If you're like me, you vaguely remember the 1995 Denzel Washington movie, but your interest was piqued by mentions of the Rawlins character on the Netflix Luke Cage series. This is definitely a different type of detective novel, and Easy Rawlins is a unique take on the "private eye" character: an amateur, unlicensed, African-American, and avoiding the police. Author Moseley excels at dialogue and immersing the reader within the scene, and making even the unfamiliar (to me) worlds of black clubs and 1940s L.A. seem familiar. He creates intriguing characters; my personal favorite is Mouse, a short (and short-tempered) gangster and Easy's backup, the John Clark/Hawk/Chas to Easy's Jack Ryan/Spenser/John Constantine. Moseley also eschews the cliched "The dame walked in on two legs that spelled one word: trouble"-style prose, and instead focuses on Easy's keen observations, and the contrasts between his actions and thoughts (especially when it comes to Easy's interactions with white racists). So why only three stars? The plot was a bit of a mess. As in most detective stories, seemingly random and unrelated events occur, and a cast of characters is introduced, while the detective remains as in the dark as the reader and finally ties everything together in an explanatory scene at the end. The disparate elements of the mystery here never gel together quite properly (especially the explanations of who murdered who). All in all, though, it's a good read, and made me want to read the rest of the series. Suffice to say that, based on the way Daphne Monet (the title devil) is described and characterized, I'd be rushing to her rescue despite all common sense too.
22 people found this helpful
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Christopher B. Derrick
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars The First Entry in what turns out to be a signature character for the author
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on January 7, 2014
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Mosley creates a mood and a character (in Easy Rawlins) that is at once powerful, and yet deceptively simple.

It took me a long time to get around to reading this (even though I'm a HUGE fan of Mosley's scifi short story collection FUTURELAND), and I'm not sure why. It reads like a charm, still feels fresh (for this genre) and gives some interesting insight into LA in the 40s from the African American perspective.

I read this back-to-back with Chester Himes' IF HE HOLLERS, LET HIM GO, which is a blistering and caustic story set in the same time period -- but written then -- and these two books together paint a portrait of the ugly side of America and Los Angeles in terms of race relations, power grabs and the arbitrary nature of

This isn't a masterpiece, but it's not meant to be; it's hard-hitting 1940s-era crime fiction, and Mosley definitely knows how to twist the tension up when he needs to.

You'll definitely want to read more Mosley and Earl Rawlins stories after this.
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charles peterson
4.0 out of 5 stars Murder and Intrigue in Post War South L.A.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 1, 2016
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A friend recommended this as a change of pace from my usual diet of Michael Connelly, Daniel Silva etc. It was definitely that.

Devil is a fast paced book about murder and intrigue in post war south L.A,. While minding his own business and trying to make ends meet after being fired from a defense plant, Easy Rawlins gets caught up in a mysterious search for a beautiful white woman who hangs out in the Black bars. Shortly, people start dying and Easy becomes a target for the police as well as for a variety of local shady characters.

The story reads well and is very fast moving. Great perspective on the tough life in post war Watts and its environs. My only complaint was that the plot got very complex and it was tough to follow all the characters. If not for the complexity, I probably would have rated the book a five.
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Cassandra E
5.0 out of 5 stars An Awesome Read
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on March 12, 2022
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Having watched the movie many times, I was beyond pleased with the depth of the characters and plot in the novel. I look forward to finishing the entire series.
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Virginia
4.0 out of 5 stars entertaining but educational look at social history and discrimination
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on December 27, 2014
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This book presents a good look at the social history of the 1940s and is very engaging. It presents racial inequities in a format that is not likely to be offensive to anyone but shows how prejudice endures far longer than it should. The book was recommended to me by my former philosophy professor, and I am glad.

Born and raised in Texas, like Easy Rawlins, I left Texas partly because of the racist attitudes prevalent there in the late 1950s and 1960s. Like Rawlins, I found California less stressful, because the racism was less entrenched and not "in my face" as it had been in Texas. I am Caucasian but participated in the Civil Rights Movement as a student. Many do not realize the degree to which racist language and behaviors are entrenched in our society. Walter Mosley presents these situations and problems in ways that raise our awareness and move us to question ourselves. I am now an Easy Rawlins fan and will read the other books.
3 people found this helpful
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Tina Foster
4.0 out of 5 stars Liked the atmoshpere.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on December 20, 2013
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I had seen the movie version with Denzel Washington and love these retro, dark stories, so bought the book. I enjoyed the book, but could see where the movie version had tried to make the plot less complicated than the book. The ending of the book was much different and more complicated than the movie. I found some of the characters less likeable in the book. I had a hard time keeping track of which characters were the bad guys.
There were some things that made me wonder. For instance, the house Easy owned didn't have a shower in the bathroom. Was that common in those days? Where did he shower or did he just hand wash everything over the sink? I thought there could be a few more details about such things. Some of the motivation of the characters wasn't clear, as to why some of the people were murdered. I think I liked the movie version better.
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Ann Elliot
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars Devil in a Blue Dress, with Matching Accessories
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on July 26, 2013
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This is classic detective noir fiction: set in post-WWII Los Angeles, full of mean streets, convoluted plot, unsavory characters, sex, and a high body count.

Toward the end, there seemed to be an overabundance of characters with the motivation a bit shaky for some of the mayhem, but this is still an enjoyable book.

In addition to the plot, there are many elements to add interest: a view of L.A. in the 1940s, a glimpse of race relations of the time, the beginnings of Easy's career as a detective, Mouse bursting on the scene in all his insane glory, and Walter Mosley's usual descriptive powers, giving the reader details about the shape and hue of everything in sight. The woman in the blue dress, for instance, has matching shoes and stockings and a distinctive brooch.

Mosley had a knack for writing Easy Rawlins tales from the very beginning, and reading this first book is a great way to set the stage for the books that followed.
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doc peterson
3.0 out of 5 stars Classic noir
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on July 30, 2011
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After reading  Six Easy Pieces: Easy Rawlins Stories , a collection of loosely related short stories featuring Easy Rawlins, an African-American detective in LA set in the early 1960s, I wanted to get a sense of where the character began. _Devil in a Blue Dress_ is the first of Mosely's series about the the private eye, and it is classic noir. Set in late 1940s LA, Rawlins just lost his job at an aircraft plant and is looking for work when he is hired to locate a missing woman (the "devil in a blue dress" and femme fatale) for a wealthy area businessman. What follows could just as easily been written by the masters, Chandler or Hammett, as Rawlins soon realizes he has bit off more than he can chew.

That Rawlins is an African-American, and dealing with the subtle (and not-so-subtle) racial nuances of the time add texture and depth to the formula that neither Sam Spade nor Philip Marlowe had to deal with. The dialogue isn't as crisp as that of the masters, and some of the characters are a bit one-dimensional (DeWitt Albright is a bit of a characture of a Southern cracker, and Mouse - Rawlins' side-kick is a bit vague), but the plot moves at a good clip and kept my attention.

I enjoyed _Devil in a Blue Dress_, but comapred to his Socrates Fortlow 
Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned  it is very apparent that this is his early work.
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William R. Leary
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific read
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on September 15, 2021
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My introduction to Easy Rawlins was a pleasant surprise. Walter Mosely is an excellent writer and seems to capture the atmosphere of life in the low rent districts of post war Los Angeles. This truly fits the definition of a hard boiled detective novel.
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