![]() ![]() I had seen people who looked like me jeered on TV and in the movies. ![]() And when I went to war to fight for freedom, I found myself in a segregated army, treated with less respect than they treated German POWs. I had been arrested for walking in the wrong part of town and threatened for looking a man in the eye. I spent my whole early life at the back of buses and in the segregated balconies at theaters. Instead, they ask Easy to see what he can find out about this crime.The case forces Rawlins to address the ethnic tribulations of 1960s America, in microcosm, and his own discomfort with discrimination, in particular. So when a mid-30s, redheaded black woman named Nola Payne-aka "Little Scarlet"-turns up dead in her apartment, strangled and shot and showing signs of recent sexual contact, the cops are reluctant to storm L.A.'s minority community, looking for her murderer,especially since the culprit may well be an injured white man Payne had sheltered, and who's now disappeared. "They've been mad since they were babies." Even with the rioting finally cooled, police remain on edge. "It's hot and people are mad," he explains in Walter Mosley's Little Scarlet. Although custodian and unlicensed PI Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins stayed safely inside during the turmoil, as an African-American male he understands all too well what it was about. Los Angeles, 1965, right after the Watts Riots, six summer days of racial violence-burning, looting, and killing-that followed the routine arrest of a black motorist for drunken driving. ![]()
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