This sequel to “Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned,” follows ex-con, Socrates Fortlow, through a series of challenges during the riots in the Watts area of Los Angeles in the 1990s. Key characters from the first book – the teen Darryl, the sometimes girlfriend Iula, Marty Gonzalez, the boss and friend at Bounty Market, crippled war veteran, Right Burke, and the black dog without hind legs, Bruno – renamed here Killer – all share the adventures. New characters emerge. A cologne-wearing radical artist, a mortician, some cops, two convicts, one still alive, from S’s prison days.
Having been socialized for twenty-seven years in prison, Socrates thinks and feels in believable ways, within a framework foreign to me and most readers. While he continues to evolve as a fascinating character, we’d like to know more about some minor characters. Mosley leaves some loose ends,
Carpenter friend, Lydell, another ex-con, shares his nightmares about the man he stabbed forty times. Finally he slices his own throat.
Right Burke, Socrates’s best friend, develops an incurable disease and begs Socrates to help him end his life, but like St Augustine, not quite yet – he wants a night of carousing and then insists on being left alone.
A promise while in prison leads Socrates on a mission to plant an exotic tree and to make love to a beautiful woman in memory of deceased friend.
After years of free rent — the landlord died—the new property owner hires two goons to break into Socrates’s home and toss his furniture outside. Socrates discovers them in the process, confronts them, and gets jailed for punching one of the men. In a twist of fate, a sympathetic judge and a frightened wealthy developer collaborate to diffuse a tense situation.
The cops accuse Socrates of murdering a young prostitute he never met. We don’t learn if her killer is caught, though an investigating officer comes to Socrates’s aid when he is arrested for protesting a bad cop. We suspect the bad cop killed the girl.
The final chapter takes the reader on an emotional roller coaster as Socrates plots how to punish a bad cop. The ultimate plan is at once clever and dangerous. The denouement brings together several characters as well as a crowded street scene, a standoff between cops and local residents.
A common theme in these episodes is how a complex man, socialized by prison and poverty, manages to influence people he encounters and how that man faces life by questioning, weighing, challenging authority, and reflecting on his past. His friends gather weekly to tackle life’s problems and discuss ethical issues.
I read these two books many months ago, but reread them as I wrote the reviews. Mosley’s prose captures the reader’s attention. Socrates is one interesting dude.
After nearly a decade, Mosley published a third book in this series, “The Right Mistake,” which I look forward to reading.