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McMillan allows each person a clear voice in the book and each is able to reveal their insecurities, their fears, their loves, their talents and of course their secrets. All of them really just want to be loved and hold a special place in the heart of their mama Viola. This story touches on universal themes that can affect families of any race, chronic illness (Viola's asthma), molestation and sexual abuse, deadbeat dads, loneliness, sibling rivalry, and the affects of birth order on personality. The central character Viola, is like most our mothers, she may work your nerves but you love her and she's almost always right
This book reads quite differently from McMillan's previous work. Though still conversational in tone, the story is more complex due to the viewpoints provided by each of the characters. Any reader of this book will see traces of their own family within it and will laugh and cry as they watch the Price family fight, reconcile and learn to love each other with the mother serving as the glue that brings them all together.
Those with ears to hear will listen and re-listen to this superb rendering of her latest tale, which unflinchingly deals with many of the ills that beset us - sorrow, unfaithfulness, addiction, self-deception, untruthfulness, anger. Yet, over and above all of these tribulations, Ms. McMillan shows us the astounding power of resiliency and love.
Viola, a seemingly-impossible-to-capture family matriarch and the mainspring of this story, is indelibly captured by the performances of TV actress Desiree Coleman and film and TV actor M E. Willis. Ranging from razor sharp to coy to vitriolic to forgiving, their voices bring this family drama to life.
Author McMillan joins actors Alfre Woodard and Richard Allen to read the abridged version. As vibrant as her prose, Ms. McMillan's voice adds impact to these adaptations.
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Strange is hired to investigate the shooting of her son, Chris Wilson, leading him to Quinn, who works in a little used bookstore in Silver Spring (Like all the locations in the book, the store really exists, it's a few blocks from my office and I sometimes swing by on my lunch break). The two men fall into an uneasy partnership as this discover more about he events that led to Quinn's killing of Wilson. They make an engagingly effective odd couple as they verbally spar with one another about race, underneath their respective flaws, they're good men. At the same time, both men are struggling to make relationships work, Strange with his divorcee secretary, and Quinn with a Latina student/waitress. As with most of Pelecanos's men, they often make selfish or simply clumsy moves in looking for love. And like most of those same guys, they have well-defined tastes in music, cars, movies, and books.
Following the tone of Pelecanos's previous work, what is gradually revealed is a sordid tale of drugs and corruption, with some powerful drug pushers, and a few violent rednecks. All this unfolds in a world instantly recognizable to Washington natives, where drug dealers work in the open, neighborhoods revolve around local restaurants, and corruption has spread to even the upscale oases (the well-known high-end restaurant Red Sage being one example). As we have come to expect from Pelecanos, everything comes together in a cinematic violent climax offering some attempt at justice. If you've read and enjoyed previous books of his, you're likely to enjoy this one as well. It's got two great new characters, and is a bit more explicit in examining racism, but is otherwise very much in keeping with his previous work.
"Right As Rain" is gritty, often humorous in a perverse sort of way, but still able to seriously address the issue of racism. Set in the mean streets of Washington D.C., Derek Strange is hired to find the daughter of a Black cop who, while off duty was killed by White policeman, Terry Quinn. Derek meets Quinn and wonders if he is racist or if he is being judged unfairly. Quinn and Strange begin to work together and uncover a father son duo that brings out the best of Pelicanos' descriptive writing skill. They are Earl and Ray Boone and are working for Colombian drug suppliers by delivering product to Afro American dealers. The Boones are portrayed to a T in appearance and dialogue as poor white trash; anti-social personalities who aren't too bright and let their basic human drives govern their crass behavior. Without spoiling the story, I'll just say that all the pieces, including themes of trust, friendship, and justice are expertly brought together in the book's climax and the stage appears set for future Strange-Quinn interactions.