Things aren't always what they appear to be. Sometimes you see things as you
were programmed to see them and react according to society's training. That
is the belief of Derek Strange, Black private investigator and ex-cop, while
he toils on his latest case. Hired to open a closed investigation by Leona
Wilson, mother of Chris Wilson, a Black police officer killed in line of duty
by another cop, he soon finds the investigation leads into a spider web of
leads. Leona believes Derek can go deep into the incident to show Chris was
not at fault for his own death.
On the night of the killing, Chris pinned an innocent man on the ground and
held a gun to his head. White Officer Terry Quinn and his partner arrived on
the scene to see a Black man holding a gun on a White man. With all the
tension, Quinn indicated that Chris never identified himself as a cop and was
shot when he turned the gun toward the officers. On autopsy, Chris's blood
alcohol level came back positive. A White cop shoots an off-duty Black cop,
and much negative publicity, accusations, and racial questions follow. Quinn
was cleared by the department but never by the publicity, so he quits the DC
police force to work in a used bookstore; and Chris's name remains under a
gray haze of innuendo.
While Strange is taking a ride with Quinn to discuss the incident, Strange
gets a call to pick up a bail jumper. Quinn distracts the brother of the
jumper by violently knocking him out --- and realizes he enjoys this and has
been missing the adrenaline rush. Quinn then asks Strange to be involved in
this investigation, one that takes them into the heart of drug operations run
among Hispanics, rednecks, and Blacks, all of whom seem to have mockery for
each other.
Pelecanos develops many issues related to socialization. Primarily, Quinn
being programmed since birth to expect a Black man holding a gun on a White
man is up to no good. Quinn didn't listen and didn't use his police powers of
deduction; all he saw was a Black man with a gun, a criminal, and made up his
mind to fire. Would he have pulled the trigger on a White man?
The issue of stereotypical images, based upon outward color, is one often
played out in entertainment and reality. In RIGHT AS RAIN, the idea is
developed from the onset when Quinn dates a half-Black and half-Puerto Rican
woman and believes it is due to her physical beauty. Before the shooting, he
had been raised fearful of neighborhoods that are on the opposite side of
town. He was taught not to expect mixing or interracial dating. This sudden
interest in a non-White woman evolves from his insistence that the shooting
did not occur because of the Black and White issue, but because he feared for
his life. Is he trying to make a point to the masses or to himself?
Related issues include becoming criminal as an accident of birth and
environment, where kids have drug dealers as their only examples and are
forced to work for them to get what television says you should have and to
lessen the gap between the haves and the have-nots. Pelecanos mentions ideas
of legalizing drugs and banning guns to solve the problems of this society as
he illustrates that racial problems and illegal drugs are not confined to
poor neighborhoods.
Secondary issues, dealing with relationships and fear of commitment, tend to
add additional intensity to these characters' lives. The social commentary
upon which Pelecanos bases his story may enlighten the portion of the world
that reads quality fiction, but what of the masses that don't read or find
reading difficult?
--- Reviewed by Nancy B. Leake
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