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R.L.'s Dream
 
 

R.L.'s Dream (Paperback)

by Walter Mosley (Author) "Pain moved up the old man's hipbone like a plow breaking through hard sod ..." (more)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

After four increasingly well-received crime novels starring Los Angeles PI Easy Rawlins, Mosley has moved strongly ahead to a more searching and deeply felt style and subject. He writes here of Atwater "Soupspoon" Wise, a battered, failing relic of a man who once played backup to legendary Delta jazz guitarist Robert "RL" Johnson and who is now barely surviving on New York's Lower East Side. When we meet him, Soupspoon, who has cancer, is being evicted from his tiny apartment. Enter Kiki Waters, a hard-drinking, profane redhead who fled a life of horror and incest in Arkansas and now ekes out an uneasy living at a Wall Street insurance firm. With her tough street smarts, she stops the eviction cold, uses her office know-how to fake lavish health insurance for Soupspoon and moves him in with her. They cling together, these two outcasts from hard times, Soupspoon with a gentleness born of deep resignation, Kiki with a protective desperation fueled by booze and rage. Gradually, Soupspoon's life begins to mend: someone he knew as a kid in the South offers him a gig at his after-hours drinking place; a pretty young girl is drawn to his sweetness. But for Kiki, the only way out is through violence and flight. Mosley has always been a vivid writer, but here his work achieves a constant level of dark poetry: he flawlessly integrates Soupspoon's and Kiki's past harsh lives and memories with the keenly observed contemporary New York slum scene as the bittersweet blues constantly sound somber chords beneath. There is no false sentimental note anywhere in the book, just a deeply moving creation of two extraordinary people who achieve a powerful humanity where it would seem almost impossible it should exist. Author tour.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

Atwater "Soupspoon" Wise, an aging bluesman in New York City, is evicted from his apartment. Kiki Waters, a young white woman, takes him in, nursing him back to health and forging the necessary health insurance information to get him treated for cancer. The two form a strange friendship; both are from the South, and both have left behind pasts that demand to be dealt with. Soupspoon knew the legendary Robert "RL" Johnson in his youth and is haunted by the desire to learn the secret of Johnson's music; Kiki was abused by her father and ran away in her early teens. Mosley's swirl of characters, locales, and memories is intoxicating, and the plot moves forward relentlessly, taut as the mystery novels (e.g., Black Betty, LJ 5/1/94) for which he is renowned. Highly recommended.
-?David Dodd, Univ. of Colorado at Colorado Springs
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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13 Reviews
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4.6 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Redemption, July 19 2003
This review is from: R L'S Dream (Paperback)
RL's Dream is a haunting story that will change the way you see your life. Through this book, you will see ways that facing up to your pain can bring redemption.

The book opens as elderly black Jazz musician, Atwater "Soupspoon" Wise, painfully returns to his apartment in lower Manhattan. His respite is brief when the landlord's men evict him for many months of not paying his rent and call Social Services to pick him up to be returned to a homeless shelter. It's cold as Soupspoon lies amidst his few belongings on the sidewalk, and it's getting dark. He's so sick he can barely speak, and has a horrible pain in his hip. He feels death standing over him.

While he's been going through this, one of his neighbors, Ms. Kiki Waters, a young white woman is also painfully coming home after being released from a hospital after being stabbed by a young boy. She is appalled to find Soupspoon on the street, for he is the man whose happiness had just cheered her a few days before the attack on her. Knowing her duty as a human being, she orders the men to move Soupspoon into her apartment along with some of his belongings.

Kiki nurses Soupspoon back to health, but uses methods that leave her life at risk.

In the course of their evolving relationship, each one learns how to turn pain into beauty and goodness. Soupspoon does it by playing and singing the blues. Kiki does it by facing up to and overcoming her fears.

The story is beautifully developed around the memories that Soupspoon and Kiki carry around of their younger days in the South. Soupspoon is frustrated that he cannot reach the heights as a musician that his friend RL Johnson could. Kiki carries intense fear from the abuse she suffered at her father's hands. Both are prisoners of those memories until they take steps to move beyond them. Those steps are their redemption.

To me the most powerful part of the book is the opening. Imagine yourself riding home on the subway full of stitches from a knife attack. Emerging, you see a poor, old man lying on the street who is your neighbor. Would you stop to help? What would you do to help? Chances are that you would not do as much as Kiki does. Yet we are supposed to love our neighbor as ourselves. Kiki hasn't known much love, yet she gives all she has to Soupspoon. It's a beautiful story, and shows how beautiful life can be.

If you also love the Blues, this book will reward you with wonderful sketches of what is was like to create that rich music that grew out of pain in the South during the early 20th century.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully touching, Dec 22 2001
By Charlotte Vale-Allen (CT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Rl S Dream (Hardcover)
There are some writers whose talent is so special that you want to save their books and make the reading of them an occasion. Walter Mosley is one of those writers. He invests his characters with such depth, such full histories that you cannot help but care about them. RL's Dream is populated by a cast of such characters; even the most minor ones (including a baby) are fully fleshed and very real. Soupspoon and Kiki are two almost-lost souls who bring each other back to life in unexpected ways. It is a credit to Mosley's rare and splendid talent that the book itself resonates with music; its cadence is almost audible in the spare prose, the all-too-human behavior of people who, often, do things without even really knowing why. To comprehend the blues, to put words, literally, to a musical theme and to do so in a kind-hearted and deeply understanding fashion is to deliver magic in the form of a book. This is a "must read" novel.
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4.0 out of 5 stars first mosley experience, probably not the last, July 11 2001
By tim camas (ft lauderdale, fl United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rl S Dream (Hardcover)
this is the first book i have purchased written my mr. mosley. his descriptions and character development are very good as is the plot. the only issue i have with his work were the romantic relationships and the sexuality described in them. i am hardly a prude and i know that this is fiction but i felt that the sexual liasons that took place were not beleivable and not relevant to the storyline. other than this one issue, this is a very good book and i would recommend it.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Love in vain
I enjoyed this book while I was reading it. I really did. Even through the descriptions of Soupspoon's pain and squalor -- which came close to turning my stomach -- I still... Read more
Published on Dec 22 2000 by Mike Stone

5.0 out of 5 stars mosley at his very best
Together with "Always Outnumbered,..." this is Mosley's greatest achievement. It puts Mosley on the same level as James Baldwin and Richard Wright; it has Baldwin's epic... Read more
Published on April 1 2000 by T. Bekken

5.0 out of 5 stars Love and goals most don't know
This book has a relationship that would be strange and eccentric to most Americans.Yet, if readers can drop their middle-class values and judgments long enough to get to know the... Read more
Published on Jan 8 2000 by oquinn

5.0 out of 5 stars Heard on 6 cassettes-Best reader ever heard, Great book!
This patchwork quilt of a story is masterful. It weaves in and out, in no chronological order, the history of the blues with slavery, and post slavery era in the Mississippi... Read more
Published on Oct 18 1999 by runningwiththewind

5.0 out of 5 stars Mosley steps out of genre to create a classic
Walter Mosley was always an uneasy fit in the detective genre, and except for Blue Light, his works outside that genre were more compelling than the stuff that made him famous --... Read more
Published on Aug 12 1999

3.0 out of 5 stars Commendable
In this first of Mosley titles not including his famous Ezekiel Rawlins character, Mosley attempts to recount the journies of Mr. Read more
Published on July 20 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars Mosley's language captures the power of the blues.
I love music, but I know very little about the blues. I had heard of Robert Johnson before I read this book-but I knew nothing about him, really. Read more
Published on May 7 1998 by HappyMedium27

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting!
Enjoyed this non-genre book by Mr. Moseley. It explained some of the mystery surrounding Robert Johnson and why people were so enthralled by him. Read more
Published on Oct 5 1997 by float@ibm.net

5.0 out of 5 stars The blues defined through a life meaningfully lived.
I thought this guy just wrote mystery novels. Then I went to hear him read from his latest, "Gone Fishin'" He riveted the room sufficiently for me to feel compelled to... Read more
Published on Feb 13 1997

5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful.
loved it. can't wait for more
Published on Oct 4 1995

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