Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned
Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned book cover

Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned

Price
$15.66
Format
Paperback
Pages
208
Publisher
Washington Square Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0671014995
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.52 x 8.25 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

" Mournful, insightful, and mystical. It is also Mosley's best work of fiction." ― Elle " A wonderful book...[with] characters who seem as real as the reader." ― Denver Post " Mosley has constructed a perfect Socrates for millennium's end -- a principled man who finds that the highest meaning of life can be attained through self-knowledge, and who convinces others of the power and value of looking within." ― San Francisco Chronicle " Powerful...hard-hitting, unrelenting, poignant short fiction." ― Booklist "Mosley's style suits his subject perfectly. The prose is sand-papery, the sentence rhythms often rough and jabbing. But then -- sudden surprise -- we come upon moments of undefended lyricism." ― Sven Birkerts, The New York Times Book Review " Unveiling a new, bigger-than-life urban hero...Mosley...confer[s] on the mean streets of contemporary L.A. what filmmaker John Ford helped create for the American West: a gun-slinging mythology of street justice and a gritty, elegiac code of honor...A maverick protagonist." ― Publishers Weekly "Tough but touching stories." ― Playboy " An insistently probing, philosophical gem...set in a world where standard notions of right and wrong have been blown to hell." ― Sonoma County Independent " The work of a writer unafraid of pushing forward his own notions of responsibility and entitlement." ― The Los Angeles Times Book Review Walter Mosley is the acclaimed author of forty-three books, including the internationally bestselling Easy Rawlins series. His best known Easy Rawlins novels include Devil in a Blue Dress , A Red Death , White Butterfly , Black Betty , and Little Yellow Dog . He is also the author of the collection of stories Always Outnumbered . Always Outgunned featuring Socrates Fortlow, which was the basis for an HBO feature film. A former president of the Mystery Writers of America, he was named a grand master by the organization in 2016. He has served on the board of directors of the National Book Foundation and is a recipient of the PEN American Center Lifetime Achievement Award. A native of Los Angeles, he now lives in New York City. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Crimson Shadow: Section One "What you doin' there, boy?"It was six a.m. Socrates Fortlow had come out to the alley, to see what was wrong with Billy. He hadn't heard him crow that morning and was worried about his old friend.The sun was just coming up. The alley was almost pretty with the trash and broken asphalt covered in half-light. Discarded wine bottles shone like murky emeralds in the sludge. In the dawn shadows Socrates didn't even notice the boy until he moved. He was standing in front of a small cardboard box, across the alley -- next to Billy's wire fence."What bidness is it to you, old man?" the boy answered. He couldn't have been more than twelve but he had that hard convict stare.Socrates knew convicts, knew them inside and out."I asked you a question, boy. Ain't yo' momma told you t'be civil?""Shit!" The boy turned away, ready to leave. He wore baggy jeans with a blooming blue T-shirt over his bony arms and chest. His hair was cut close to the scalp.The boy bent down to pick up the box."What they call you?" Socrates asked the skinny butt stuck up in the air."What's it to you?"Socrates pushed open the wooden fence and leapt. If the boy hadn't had his back turned he would have been able to dodge the stiff lunge. As it was he heard something and moved quickly to the side.Quickly. But not quickly enough.Socrates grabbed the skinny arms with his big hands -- the rock breakers, as Joe Benz used to call them."Ow! Shit!"Socrates shook the boy until the serrated steak knife, which had appeared from nowhere, fell from his hand.The old brown rooster was dead in the box. His head slashed so badly that half of the beak was gone."Let me loose, man." The boy kicked, but Socrates held him at arm's length."Don't make me hurt you, boy," he warned. He let go of one arm and said, "Pick up that box. Pick it up!" When the boy obeyed, Socrates pulled him by the arm -- dragged him through the gate, past the tomato plants and string bean vines, into the two rooms where he'd stayed since they'd let him out of prison.The kitchen was only big enough for a man and a half. The floor was pitted linoleum; maroon where it had kept its color, gray where it had worn through. There was a card table for dining and a fold-up plastic chair for a seat. There was a sink with a hot plate on the drainboard and shelves that were once cabinets -- before the doors were torn off.The light fixture above the sink had a sixty-watt bulb burning in it. The room smelled of coffee. A newspaper was spread across the table.Socrates shoved the boy into the chair, not gently."Sit'own!"There was a mass of webbing next to the weak lightbulb. A red spider picked its way slowly through the strands."What's your name, boy?" Socrates asked again."Darryl."There was a photograph of a painting tacked underneath the light. It was the image of a black woman in the doorway of a house. She wore a red dress and a red hat to protect her eyes from the sun. She had her arms crossed under her breasts and looked angry. Darryl stared at the painting while the spider danced above."Why you kill my friend, asshole?""What?" Darryl asked. There was fear in his voice."You heard me.""I-I-I din't kill nobody." Darryl gulped and opened his eyes wider than seemed possible. "Who told you that?"When Socrates didn't say anything, Darryl jumped up to run, but the man socked him in the chest, knocking the wind out of him, pushing him back down in the chair.Socrates squatted down and scooped the rooster up out of the box. He held the limp old bird up in front of Darryl's face."Why you kill Billy, boy?""That's a bird." Darryl pointed. There was relief mixed with panic in his eyes."That's my friend.""You crazy, old man. That's a bird. Bird cain't be nobody's friend." Darryl's words were still wild. Socrates knew the guilty look on his face.He wondered at the boy and at the rooster that had gotten him out of his bed every day for the past eight years. A rage went through him and he crushed the rooster's neck in his fist."You crazy," Darryl said.A large truck made its way down the alley just then. The heavy vibrations went through the small kitchen, making plates and tinware rattle loudly.Socrates shoved the corpse into the boy's lap. "Get ovah there to the sink an' pluck it.""Shit!""You don't have to do it...""You better believe I ain't gonna...""...but I will kick holy shit outta you if you don't.""Pluck what? What you mean, pluck it?""I mean go ovah t'that sink an' pull out the feathers. What you kill it for if you ain't gonna pluck it?""I'as gonna sell it.""Sell it?""Yeah," Darryl said. "Sell it to some old lady wanna make some chicken."Copyright © 1998 by Walter Mosley Read more

Features & Highlights

  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Walter Mosley introduces an "astonishing character" (Los Angeles Times Book Review) in this acclaimed collection of entwined tales. Meet Socrates Fortlow, a tough ex-con seeking truth and redemption in South Central Los Angeles—and finding the miracle of survival.
  • "I either committed a crime or had a crime done to me every day I was in jail. Once you go to prison you belong there."
  • Socrates Fortlow has done his time: twenty-seven years for murder and rape, acts forged by his huge, rock-breaking hands. Now, he has come home to a new kind of prison: two battered rooms in an abandoned building in Watts. Working for the Bounty supermarket, and moving perilously close to invisibility, it is Socrates who throws a lifeline to a drowning man: young Darryl, whose shaky path is already bloodstained and fearsome. In a place of violence and hopelessness, Socrates offers up his own battle-scarred wisdom that can turn the world around.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(254)
★★★★
25%
(106)
★★★
15%
(64)
★★
7%
(30)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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True wisdom

This has to come close to being the best collection of short-stories written in English during the last twenty years.
At their best the taut writing and uncanny ability to explode the confusion and emptiness at the heart of many people's lives recalls Raymond Carver, but where Carver is content to leave his ethics enigmatic, Mosley is righteous and fierce. This is not to say that the central character, Socrates Fortlow is a judgemental moralist. Far from it. This burly ex-con with his huge rock-crushing hands and terrible past, is searching for truth in a world where truth is no much unfashionable as crushed out of people's souls by injustice. He is a seeker not a saviour.
The stories also form the link between Mosley's crime writing and his outstanding first SF novel, Blue Light, where issues of metaphysics are brought further into the foreground. Through the stories, Socrates acquires a kind of nobility that can only come from a totally honest struggle our own impulses as well as with the environment that surrounds us. There is a sense of place in 'Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned' that is very specific to 1980s Watts, but mythic and resonant and almost timeless at the same time. This only comes from genuine wisdom and understanding, qualities in which Mosley far outshines almost all contemporary authors.
There are one or two weaker stories, notably one in which Socrates gets involved with the courts again, but this is a collection to come back to. And as with Raymond Carver, I felt compelled to stop for quite some time after each one as the subtle but powerful emotional impact percolated through my brain.
19 people found this helpful
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Beautifully written, great insight

I heard it was a book of short stories, but found it to read like a novel. Socrates is a deep and thoughtful character who will stay on your mind a long time. He tries to do the right thing in very adverse conditions. This book was an easy read, but deep and beautiful. I'd recommend to every reader I know.
17 people found this helpful
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Outstanding!

Before I read this book, I would never have known that I could fall in love with a character who is a violent ex-convict. Socrates Fortlow, two-time murderer and one-time rapist (at least the crimes of which he has been convicted) has spent most of his life learning to survive behind bars.
However, eight years after his release from the Indiana State Penitentiary, and his relocation to South Central L.A., he has become much more like his namesake. This collection of interrelated short stories together form a remarkable tale of subtle, and perhaps even unconscious, redemption. Socrates becomes a mentor, best friend, and invaluable member of society. In addition, he learns that not all is black and white, whether it be with regard to morality, or as between the races.
The stories and their moral teachings are subtle, like well-crafted fables. I read this in one evening, unable to put down this wonderfully written book.
11 people found this helpful
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A man of many seasons.

Meet Socrates Fortlow, a man who served years of prison time for the deaths and rape of a young couple, getting out of prison and trying to adjust to life on the outside as well as trying to come to terms with the life he led before and during his incarceration. During this fourteen short story run, the supporting cast are just as strong as they are flawed, much like Socrates himself. It was this character trait that kept me reading until the end. Socrates lived a hard life and he paid the price for it, however, throughout this book, his anger and resentment has made him not only a heroic figure, but a tragic one as well. Where else can you come across a man that will put together a plan to run a drug dealer out of his neighborhood, and the next story will have him standing in the face of one of his friends and tell him that he will stab him in the back to get with his wife and kids if he doesn't straighten up and fly right? It's these complex traits that make Mr. Fortlow such a facinating character, and this a facinating book.
8 people found this helpful
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When We Need A Hero

At first you can't believe you can find a role model in a man who has served 28 years in prison for a rape and double murder, but Socrates Fortlow serves as the repository of the most articulate criticism of what's wrong with America - and how each of us can make a difference. Set in the LA of the recent past, we follow - and soon watch in wonder - as this physical and moral giant brings us deep insights into America's unique and deeply flawed economic system, our profound history of racism and our conflicted values. I've used this as supplementary reading for a course in Social Policy. One student shared, "I'm not ashamed to admit I cried repeatedly and fell in love with Socrates." Mosley wrote two other novels in this series ("Walkin' the Dog" is next), and while they don't have the power of this one, they bring Socrates' life and work to redeem his life, through service to his community, to a thoughtful conclusion. [[ASIN:B003P2VDO2 Walkin' the Dog]]
5 people found this helpful
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gripping stories from master storyteller

After reading a couple of Mosley's Easy Rawlins mysteries, which I liked fairly well, I picked up this book of stories about the estimable Socrates Fortlowe. It is a wonderful collection, and also important, because it really questions that stubborn myth known as "the American dream", and it does so without putting down the people who still believe in that myth, against all possible odds. The Fortlowe stories are far richer than the Rawlins books, especially because the main character is so complicated, and because Mosley never lets him take the obvious way out of any situation. Highly recommended to anyone not afraid of books with attitude.
5 people found this helpful
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Excellant book

This book was real winner. The movie, by the title 'Always Out-numbered,' was really engaging and entertaining, but the book better describes the story behind the actions of many of the charactors. After reading the book [if you've already seen the movie] you'll find yourself saying "Oh, so that's why that happened - it certainly does explain it now!'' The movie starred Lawrence Fishburn, Bill Nun (Radio Raheem from Spike Lee's 'Do the Right Thing), Bill Duke (The mean-looking black Interrogating detective from Mennace II Society), Bill Cobs, Cicley Tysen, Isaiah Washington, Laurie Metcalf (sister Jackie from sit-com 'Roseanne,' Natalie Cole, and last but not least - Don Cheedle's real-life true love Brigid Coulter. Please don't make the mistake of thinking that Natalie Coal cannot act, because she 'more than proved herself' in this minor, but powerful role as resteraunt owner Iowa Gibbs. Laurie Metcalf was every bit as much ''out of charactor'' in her role as Sandra Bullock was [in her role] in the movie 'Crash,' and like Bullock, she did an excellant performance! The supporting actor of this great movie was a thirteen-year-old new-commer Daniel Williams who played 'Darryle,' the wayward pre-teen thug-wannabe that Socrates (Fishburn) became a mentor and protector to. I'm really surprised that Williams hasn't had more roles in the years that followed [even to-date], because he struck me as such a promising candidate back then. Enjoy!
4 people found this helpful
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a great work of art

Like many other readers who have read and loved this book and its protagonist, Socrates Fortlow, I too was deeply moved by Walter Mosely's amazing book. Too few books "ring true" in the way that this one does. Too few books grapple with the most important issues, the biggest questions while, at the same time, weaving a story that the reader can't set down . . .Mosely does all of the above and much more. I am deeply appreciative of his wonderful contribution to the literature of our times. This book will outlive all of us . . . and it should!
4 people found this helpful
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black power

Every story here weighs a hundred tons, carved out of living rock. They have the grandeur of Greek tragedy or myth. America should grieve that a great hero of contemporary literatures rages against manmade inequities built into the system we live by.
3 people found this helpful
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Better than Easy?

1. What is the text about? A series of interrelated stories about an ex-con living in Los Angeles; redemption and change
2. What is good about it? The stories are crispy written and evocative. Mosley writes with strong themes but doesn't bash you with them.
3. What is not so good about it? Nothing. But it's not a traditional narrative and those seeking that type of work may be disappointed (but not likely).
4. Who might like it? Fans of Mosley's other work (the Easy Rawlins series); fans of sociological fiction, African American themed fiction.
5. Personal bias: None really, except I like Mosley's work a lot. This is more "literary" than the Easy Rawlins stuff.
3 people found this helpful