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Synopsis As a high school custodian, Easy Rawlins has been trying to live on the straight and narrow, and for two years he's been succeeding. Then he gets tangled up in the life of Idabell Turner--math teacher and femme fatale. When her husband and brother-in-law are murdered, Easy hits the streets to find the killer before the cops get a chance to pin the rap on him. A "New York Times" Notable Book of 1996.
Publisher's Notes
First Line: "When I got to work that Monday morning I knew something was wrong."
Industry Reviews "As in all the Rawlins books, Mr. Mosley writes with a keen sense of place and a sharp style that pins his unpredictable characters deftly to the page." Wall Street Journal - Tom Nolan (07/19/1996)
"Mosley writes with history breathing down his neck, skillfully twinning cause and effect, placing crime--like sex, ambition, the hopes of a full rich life--into a context made tragic by the Kennedy assassination. No grandstanding, no melodrama; just a lithe, resonant prose, showing its muscle and going for gold. Quality Stuff. Mosley continues to set the pace for the genre." Literary Review - Philip Oakes (09/19/1996)
"...no living novelist beats Mosley's nervy sense of what thin ice the solidest-seeming characters build their lives upon, and how terrifying it is to feel the surface crack." McMurtry
"The beauty of Walter Mosley's novels lies in his gallery of vivid characters. The varieties of Everyman he introduces are guaranteed to refocus his reader's vision of America through an ever shifting lens....Packaged with Mosley's strongest moves, 'A Little Yellow Dog' is rich and thrilling." Starobin
"What makes this book as impressive as it is is the humanity of its hero and the author's impressive abilities as a writer." Smith
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