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Socrates Fortlow

Created by Walter Mosley
(1952–)

Not a private eye, not a cop, not even really an amateur sleuth, SOCRATES FORTLOW is just an aging ex-con (he served twenty-seven years for a double murder) trying to cope. He lives in a tiny, makeshift two-room Watts apartment, cooking on a hot plate, taking whatever honest work he can find, struggling to control a seemingly boundless rage and propensity for violence. Socrates must find a way to live an honorable life as a single black man on the margins of a world of violence, despair and poverty, a task which takes every ounce of self-control he has, in this potent series of short stories by Walter Mosley.

A 1997 volume, Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned, collected fourteen of Mosley’s hard-boiled morality plays, for which he received the Anisfield-Wolf Award, an honour given to works that increase the appreciation and understanding of race in America. One of the stories also received an O’Henry Award, and was featured in Prize Stories 1996: The O’Henry Awards edited by William Abraham.

The collection was also adapted and made into an HBO/NYC and Palomar Pictures film, starring Laurence Fishburne as Socrates, with Natalie Cole, Cicely Tyson and Bill Cobbs. It was directed by Michael Apted from a screenplay written by Mosley himself.

Two years later, Walkin’ the Dog rounded up a dozen more stories.

Fans of Mosley’s acclaimed Easy Rawlins series may be disconcerted by the occasional lack of obvious mysteries — or even “real” crime — in these stories, but Mosley’s after bigger game here. Imagine Chandler’s honourable man, not having the choice to go down those mean streets, but trapped on them.

UNDER OATH

SHORT STORIES

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TELEVISION

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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