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Brother
man, Brother man
A review of Walter Mosley's Walkin the Dog (pub. Little, Brown,
& Company) 1999
Walter
Mosley has done it again! He has broken the mold for literary fiction.
Mosley is one of the premier writers of this generation who refuses
to be pigeonholed. Media and the publishing industry have tried
to define him as a mystery writer, after his successful Easy Rawlins
books. As a novelist, after his blues allegory/ impressionistic
fiction, RL's Dream, then as a science fiction writer during the
publication of Blue Light. More recently he completed a series of
non-fiction essays, Workin' on The Chain Gang, exploring the post-slavery
generations of African-Americans in this country. As a writer, Mosley
feels one should write to tell stories of all kinds, to fully be
part of the canon of writers.
The
follow-up to his collections of stories, Always Outnumbered, Always
Outgunned, is Walkin' the Dog with it's protagonist, Socrates Fortlow
. Walter Mosley has given us a modern day, Jesse B. Simple of Langston
Hughes' fame (by the way, Mosley is producing Simple Tales for HBO
based on the Hughes' character). Socrates Fortlow, the ex-con turned
street philosopher, is a Jesse for the 90's. He observes the trials
and tribulations of black society in latter day Los Angeles and
Watts (circa. 80's). We follow Socrates as his ponders his place
in the world; much in the same way Jesse did in 60's Harlem.
What
I love about Socrates (and Mosley) is that he is a walking, breathing,
and redemption song for black men. Socrates like most brothers is
trying to find peace in his world and in his heart. Socrates, a
pariah of sort, is the namesake of one of the greatest philosophers,
whose idea of life is, ironically, discovering knowledge. Mosley
the skilled writer that he is takes us, the reader, along with him
as he explores black-on-black consciousness in his community. Mosley
takes us on a journey into the inner city neighborhoods; the back
alleys where Socrates' lives, the streets at twilight time, into
the homes and hearts of the characters that populate this world.
The
characters and some of the lessons Socrates have learned are revisited
in Walkin the Dog. Darryl, the man child that Socrates "adopts"
is here for him to pass on his life lessons to the growing young
black male, who has questions of his own about the world and his
place in it. Harold and his wife, Corrine are back giving light
to the life Socrates might have had if he had taken a different
road. The presence of Right Burke is felt throughout the book, but
strongest in the story, Promise, it that Socrates tries to keep
his word and honor his friend's wishes and memory. Socrates has
a new friend in a two-legged dog, amply named, Killer (they share
a handicap and a burden of what they have done, a cross to bear).
Mosley doesn't let us forget that Socrates is a man "whose done
terrible things" but he is someone who is trying to make peace with
them. This time out he encounters a mugger (a younger Socrates)
that he kills in "self defense", he contemplates "killing" a rogue
cop that is terrorizing the community, and he allows someone to
love him and make love to him, kissing away the scars and pain.
/3å* Floppy (A:) Mosley has given us the everyman of the 90's in
Socrates Fortlow. Reading Walkin the Dog, I knew "Soco" just like
I knew other brother men in our community. They live in our community,
in our families, and most importantly in our hearts.
Mosley
lets you experience the everyman's trials and tribulation of getting
his life back. As a reader, I was wrapped up in Socrates' day-to-day
activities and adventures. As a Black man, I laid back, sometimes
giggling, sometimes crying, and always saying softly to myself,
"brother man, brother man."
Reviewed
by TS Murphy 26 July 2000
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