Looking for Trouble, by Walter Mosley

For problems that are not. Even more so when one belongs to the underworld for the mere fact of being. The disinherited suffer in the first instance the lashes of power to preserve the status quo. Defending these types of people is becoming devil's advocate. But it is that to Mosley he likes lost causes to make his black plots that something else. A component that points to social criticism. If only to show that we are not so blind...

Although Leonid McGill works as a private detective in New York, much of his world revolves around the favors he owes and is owed. One of his outstanding debts is with a hit man from Mississippi who once spared his life. He now wants to collect it by asking him to help an old blues singer, who is over ninety years old and before he dies he wants to send a letter to a young heiress.

The letter reveals that black blood runs through the veins of the girl, whose wealthy family represents the most select values ​​of traditional White America. There are a lot of people willing to do whatever it takes to keep news like this from being made public, but Leonild loves to face these problems.

You can now buy the novel "Looking for trouble", by Walter Mosley, here:

Looking for trouble, Mosley
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