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Blowing up: Walter Mosley is having a very prolific year, even for him, with an almost indescribable novel, a new mystery, a television venture and an editing project.


Walter Mosley Walter Mosley (born January 12, 1952) is a prominent American novelist, most widely recognized for his crime fiction.

Mosley has written a series of best-selling historical mysteries featuring the hard-boiled detective Easy Rawlins, a black private investigator and World War
 has never experienced writer's block writer's block Psychiatry An occupational neurosis of authors, in whom creative juices are temporarily or permanently inspissated . Ever. But he expects to. "I'm just hoping that when it happens I'll have enough things written so that I won't have to worry about it," he says, in a telephone interview from his New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 apartment.

Mosley has been dizzyingly busy on con current projects, crossing genres, challenging readers' psyches and stretching his characters to new emotional depths and heights.

Mosley's latest novel, The Man in My Basement is due out January 2004. Fear Itself, the latest Fearless Jones mystery, debuted in July 2003. And The Best American Short Stories The Best American Short Stories yearly anthology is a part of the Best American Series published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. Since 1915, the BASS anthology has strived to contain the best short stories by some of the best-known writers in contemporary American  2003, edited by Mosley with Katrina Kenison, was scheduled for release in October 2003. He has also been working on an Easy Rawlins television series for the USA Network, a "science fiction novel about slavery" for young adults and a movie project with director Wayne Wang
This is a Chinese name; the family name is 王 (Wang).
Wayne Wang (Chinese: 王穎; Pinyin: Wáng Yǐng 
. Has Mosley been cloned?

"It's really not that much. It's no more than you do every day," he says, laughing at the understatement. "I have all day every day to write, and I try not to do anything but write."

Paladoxically, he then mentions a few recent public appearances from Harlem to Idaho, and his intense interest in impoverished African nations, which he addresses as an outspoken hoard member of TransAfrica Forum TransAfrica Forum is a non-profit, global justice organization focusing on conditions in Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America. The organization sponsors seminars, , public awareness campaigns, and training programs that promote human rights and alternative perspectives on the . "But even when I travel I try to write every morning. Writing is what I do."

Being prolific on many fronts seems to he Mosley's modus operandi [Latin, Method of working.] A term used by law enforcement authorities to describe the particular manner in which a crime is committed.

The term modus operandi is most commonly used in criminal cases. It is sometimes referred to by its initials, M.O.
. "In a funny kind of negative way, I'm representative of a new breed of crime writers and fiction writers," Mosley said in a 2001 interview for the on-line edition of BookPage, "because I write so many different kinds of books."

The Man in My Basement is, indeed, a different kind of book. Even its promoters find the book indescribable. In her letter to BIBR BIBR Bay Islands Beach Resort (Roatan, Honduras)
BIBR Backward Indicator Bit Received
, Laura Quinn, a Little, Brown executive wrote:

"Mosley has written mysteries, science fiction, and short stories. The Man in My Basement fits none of these genres. I have difficulty comparing it to anything. This is one strange work of fiction...."

For starters, it has an unlikable protagonist, a man who lies, steals, womanizes, drinks, daydreams and generally epitomizes uselessness. Unemployed and disgraced in his community, Charles Blakey lives in a house in the Hamptons, left to by his proud ancestors. Unlike the good-hearted Easy Rawlins and the troubled hut dignified Socrates Fortlow of Mosley's novels, Blakey appears to have no redeeming qualities. "Oh, he's not really that bad," Mosley insists good-naturedly. "The point is he gets his life together after he meets Aniston."

Aniston Bennet is a guilt-ridden mercenary who has profited from Third World atrocities far worse than any Blakey could even imagine. One day, Bennet appears at Blakey's door offering him a way out of his deepening financial woes. In exchange for a considerable amount of money, Bennet wants to become a prisoner in Blakey's storm-proof basement to atone for his treachery.

"Your whole life could be called a failure," Bennet declares once he is ensconced en·sconce  
tr.v. en·sconced, en·sconc·ing, en·sconc·es
1. To settle (oneself) securely or comfortably: She ensconced herself in an armchair.

2.
 in the cellar. "Every second up until this moment has been wasted. But you are truly innocent while I, who have changed the course of nations, am not worthy to call you friend."

Blakey begins a transformation in an evocative tale of an emotionally undeveloped man's coming-of-age.

Mosley describes The Man in My Basement as essentially an existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism  
n.
A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the
 work, and he acknowledges that parallels will be made to The Stranger, the 1946 novel by Albert Camus Noun 1. Albert Camus - French writer who portrayed the human condition as isolated in an absurd world (1913-1960)
Camus
 about a young man's alienation and spiritual uncertainty. "That's OK," he reasons. "I love Albert Camus."

For a successful mystery writer to shatter the boundaries his faithful readers and publishers have imposed might be considered risky, but Mosley rejects that idea. "When his longtime publisher Norton rejected his science fiction work, Blue Light, in 2000, he found another publisher, Little, Brown. Mosley theorizes that the success of many genre authors wanes after about 10 years. "By diversifying, I make it much more possible to survive. I do cross boundaries. I do innovative things that other people don't do, but I don't consider it risk taking; I think I am galvanizing galvanizing, process of coating a metal, usually iron or steel, with a protective covering of zinc. Galvanized iron is prepared either by dipping iron, from which rust has been removed by the action of sulfuric acid, into molten zinc so that a thin layer of the zinc  my career."

Whatever the genre, Mosley's heroes--even Blakey--find ways to become self-sufficient, despite the odds, a point that Mosley says is critical. Independence and economic survival are important themes throughout his work.

In his other new novel, Fear Itself, the more familiar Mosley guides the reader through another taut mystery involving Paris Minton, a reticent bookstore owner forced into hiding while trying to help his trouble-plagued comrade Fern less Jones in 1950s Los Angeles. It is ultimately as much a story of loyalty and friendship as it is a suspenseful page-turner.

Mosley's third new project, The Best American Short Stories 2003, is a collection chosen by Mosley from publications ranging from mainstream Harper's and Esquire to the African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  literary journal Callaloo cal·la·loo  
n.
1. The edible spinachlike leaves of the dasheen.

2. A soup or stew made of these leaves or other greens, okra, crabmeat, and seasonings.
 and the edgy quarterly Tin House. The writers include well-known novelists Edwidge Danticat, E.L. Doctorow, Louise Erdrich and newer talents, including ZZ Packer.

This recent flurry of activity does not follow a lull. When a British reporter asked Mosley during a 1999 interview what he was working on, the author cracked, "So many things, it's frightening."

Mosley's creative productivity hasn't stalled since he typed his first literary sentence while working at his computer-programming job in the late 1980s. His first novel, Gone Fishin' didn't interest publishers at the time. But his next, Devil in a Blue Dress Devil in a Blue Dress is a 1990 hardboiled mystery novel by Walter Mosley, the first of his mystery novels featuring Easy Rawlins, a black private detective in post-World War II Southern California.  (1990), attracted W.W. Norton, which went on to punish A Red Death (1991). White Butterfly (1992), Black Betty (1094) and A Little Yellow Dog (1996); there was also the critically acclaimed blues novel RL's Dream (1995).

After those successes, he took Gone Fishin' to a black publisher in 1997, Black Classic Press, and it is now available in paperback from Atria Atria
The heart has four chambers. The right and left atria are at the top of the heart and receive returning blood from the veins. The right and left ventricles are at the bottom of the heart and act as the body's main pumps.
 Books. Devil was adapted into the 1997 film starring Denzel Washington, at the same time Mosley was creating Socrates Fortlow in Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned (1997), which became an HBO Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO)
A form of oxygen therapy in which the patient breathes oxygen in a pressurized chamber.

Mentioned in: Ozone Therapy
 movie starring Laurence Fishburne. Walkin' the Dog (Little Brown 1999) continued the Fortlow saga. Six Easy Pieces, a collection of Easy Rawlins Stories, and the latest Easy Rawlins novel Bad Boy Brawly brawl·y  
adj. brawl·i·er, brawl·i·est
1. Engaged in brawling.

2. Tending to brawl.
 Brown, were both published by Little, Brown within the last year. A new Rawlins mystery. Little Scarlet, is slated for release next summer.

Meanwhile, in recent years Mosley found time to write a play, Since You Been Gone. And last year he won a Grammy in the category "Best Liner Notes" for his text on a Richard Pryor collector's album Richard Pryor ... And It's Deep Too!

Mosley was born in Los Angeles in 1952, the only child of interracial in·ter·ra·cial  
adj.
Relating to, involving, or representing different races: interracial fellowship; an interracial neighborhood.
 parents, a Jewish mother, who proudly shows up at his book signings, and an African American father, who died in 1993. He now lives in New York with his wife, Joy Kellman, a choreographer. Mosley credits his Southern-born father, Leroy, an avid storyteller, with passing along his gift. He also admits imbuing his heroes with some of his father's strengths. "When my father was about 11, he wrote a western short story and sent it off to a magazine. He never heard anything, but he later saw his story in the magazine with a few changes in it. They had stolen his story." Mosley says his father's telling of that experience was a pivotal moment in their relationship, "I have opportunities he didn't have, so I should really take advantage of them," Mosley says today.

Pearl Stewart, a former newspaper editor, teaches journalism at Florida A&M University.
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Title Annotation:fiction
Author:Stewart, Pearl
Publication:Black Issues Book Review
Article Type:Interview
Date:Nov 1, 2003
Words:1262
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