Every Man a King

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Mosley, Walter Author
Graham, Dion Narrator
Series
Published
Hachette Audio , 2023.
Status
Checked Out

Description

In this highly anticipated sequel from Edgar Award-winning "master of craft and narrative," Walter Mosley, Joe King Oliver is entangled in a dangerous case when he's asked to investigate whether a white nationalist is being unjustly set up (National Book Foundation).

When friend of the family and multi-billionaire Roger Ferris comes to Joe with an assignment, he’s got no choice but to accept, even if the case is a tough one to stomach. White nationalist Alfred Xavier Quiller has been accused of murder and the sale of sensitive information to the Russians. Ferris has reason to believe Quiller’s been set up and he needs King to see if the charges hold. This linear assignment becomes a winding quest to uncover the extent of Quiller’s dealings, to understand Ferris’ skin in the game, and to get to the bottom of who is working for whom. Even with the help of bodyguard and mercenary Oliya Ruez—no regular girl Friday—the machine King’s up against proves relentless and unsparing. As King gets closer to exposing the truth, he and his loved ones barrel towards grave danger. Mosley once again proves himself a "master of craft and narrative" (National Book Foundation) in this carefully plotted mystery that is at once a classic caper, a family saga and an examination of fealty, pride and how deep debt can go.

A NYTBR Editors' Choice Selection 

More Details

Format
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
02/21/2023
Language
English
ISBN
9781549102189

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Also in this Series

  • Down the river unto the sea (King Oliver novels Volume 1) Cover
  • Every man a king (King Oliver novels Volume 2) Cover
  • Been wrong so long it feels right (King Oliver novels Volume 3) Cover

Other Editions and Formats

Author Notes

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Readers looking for captivating and tough Black private investigators working in a bustling city rife with unsavory players and criminal activity will find them in these gritty mysteries. Emma Djan is set in Ghana; King Oliver in America. -- Andrienne Cruz
Both Alex Cross and King Oliver take on gritty cases filled with intrigue and danger in these fast-paced series. Alex Cross is a thriller series, while King Oliver is focused more on the intricacies of the mysteries. -- Stephen Ashley
These stylish and gritty own voices mystery series feature Black private detectives who found their calling after being framed. Both feature intriguing protagonists investigating criminal cases in big American cities (New York in King Oliver; Washington D.C. in Dickie Cornish). -- Andrienne Cruz
These gritty mystery series are full of complex, dangerous cases and plenty of intrigue. Joe King Oliver is a ruthless private investigator, while Myron Bolitar is a crime-solving sports agent. -- Stephen Ashley
These gritty and suspenseful mysteries feature Black private investigators who were former police officers from the LAPD (Trevor Finnegan) and NYPD (King Oliver). Both are fast-paced with a strong sense of place that captures their ruthless surroundings. -- Andrienne Cruz
While King Oliver is a bit broodier than V. I. Warshawski, both resolute big-city private detectives (Warshawski works in Chicago and Oliver in New York City) unflinchingly pursue justice at any cost in these gritty mystery series. -- Stephen Ashley
Brooding investigators determined to put an end to corruption and crime take on a variety of twisted cases in both of these gritty yet lyrical mystery series. -- Stephen Ashley
These engaging mystery series balance lyrical and atmospheric prose with gritty, somewhat bleak imagery as hardboiled, determined investigators crack a variety of twisty and complex cases. -- Stephen Ashley
These series have the appeal factors gritty, atmospheric, and intricately plotted, and they have the genre "hardboiled fiction"; the subjects "private investigators," "former police," and "american people"; include the identity "black"; and characters that are "brooding characters" and "flawed characters."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
NoveList recommends "Alex Cross novels" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "V. I. Warshawski mysteries" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Cork O'Connor mysteries" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
These books have the appeal factors gritty, and they have the subjects "private investigators," "former police," and "former wives"; and characters that are "brooding characters."
These books have the appeal factors gritty, intensifying, and own voices, and they have the genre "african american fiction"; the subjects "murder suspects," "conspiracies," and "murder investigation"; include the identity "black"; and characters that are "brooding characters," "flawed characters," and "complex characters."
These books have the genre "african american fiction"; the subjects "african american men," "private investigators," and "former police"; and include the identity "black."
NoveList recommends "Emma Djan novels" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Trevor Finnegan mysteries" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
Both intricately plotted mystery series installments feature intrepid Black PIs investigating criminal cases and uncovering ulterior motives in high-profile American cities (New York in Joe Oliver; Los Angeles in Trevor Finnegan) full of dangerous activities and players. -- Andrienne Cruz
These books have the appeal factors gritty, haunting, and lyrical, and they have the genre "african american fiction"; the subjects "african american men," "race relations," and "murder suspects"; include the identity "black"; and characters that are "complex characters."
NoveList recommends "Myron Bolitar mysteries" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.
NoveList recommends "Dave Robicheaux novels" for fans of "King Oliver novels". Check out the first book in the series.

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Readers looking for hardboiled fiction that captures the feel of post-World War II Los Angeles might try James Ellroy. Ellroy writes police procedurals, but his main characters, like many of Walter Mosley's heroes, are outsiders in their departments and operate at various levels of society. Ellroy's works can be violent. -- Katherine Johnson
Gar Anthony Haywood captures the feel of late 20th century Los Angeles through his Black investigator who deals with many of the problems of contemporary urban life -- drugs, gangs, racism, and poverty -- and who brings a strong conscience to his task. Haywood, like Mosley, creates well-drawn secondary characters. -- Krista Biggs
These authors' gritty noir crime fiction not only tells a suspenseful, fast-paced story but also offers an eye-opening exploration of racial politics at various times in American history. Both authors also write an occasional nonfiction book focusing on race, and many of Mat Johnson's works are graphic novels. -- Melissa Gray
While Jewell Parker Rhodes includes voodoo in her work and Walter Mosley favors street smarts, both authors write character-driven African-American mysteries imbued with a vivid sense of place and a gritty feel. Parker's strong women and Mosley's world-weary men are complex protagonists who struggle with evil within and without. -- Mike Nilsson
Though Sara Gran writes about a moody streetwise young woman and Walter Mosley features a world-weary man, both of their series lead private detectives who offer intriguing commentary on their milieux and social conditions as they solve mysteries. These authors also write compelling non-series novels. -- Katherine Johnson
Both authors write gritty, atmospheric hardboiled mysteries about private detectives operating in morally complex settings during the twentieth century. -- CJ Connor
Nelscott's Smokey Dalton is a Black private eye, who, like Easy Rawlins, must make difficult choices, shaped by his commitment to truth, while negotiating both white and Black society. Like Mosley, Nelscott does a fine job of portraying all sides of urban life in the late 1960s. -- Katherine Johnson
Readers looking for more exploration of the intersection between white and Black worlds may enjoy Walter Hambly's Benjamin January mysteries, set in New Orleans in the 1830s. As a free man, January can operate in both the white and black worlds, but like Walter Mosley's characters, he doesn't quite fit in either. -- Krista Biggs
In their culturally diverse novels, African American authors Attica Locke and Walter Mosley create well-developed characters, complex mysteries, and convincing period detail. Populated with cops, private detectives, and lawyers, their tales are often gritty and atmospheric, offering clever plotting and thought-provoking scenarios. -- Mike Nilsson
These authors' works have the subjects "race relations," "fifteen-year-old girls," and "freedom seekers."
These authors' works have the subjects "race relations," "african american teenagers," and "racism."
These authors' works have the genre "african american fiction"; the subjects "african american men," "african american teenagers," and "freed people"; and include the identity "black."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

PI and former cop Joe King Oliver is slowly recovering from the trauma he endured after being imprisoned for crimes he didn't commit (Down the River unto the Sea, 2018). Then he lands in the middle of something that will bring him new nightmares. Inexplicably, Joe's 93-year-old grandmother, Brenda, the daughter of Black sharecroppers, has taken up residence with blue-blooded multibillionaire Roger Ferris, who asks Joe to determine if white nationalist Quiller is innocent of the murder charge against him. Joe wants nothing to do with the repugnant Quiller but agrees to poke around out of loyalty to his grandmother. The more Joe pokes, the more he arouses the lethal ire of rich white men who don't want a Black sleuth getting his hands on a document purportedly in Quiller's possession--one detailing the transgressions of the country's power brokers. The plot takes some overly byzantine turns, but Mosley again shows his talent for character building, not only in the many-sided Joe, as vulnerable as he is resilient, but also in a superb supporting cast, including Joe's daughter, Aja, and mercenary Oliya, who could easily front her own series. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The second King Oliver novel lives up to the excitement generated by its Edgar-winning predecessor.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

The tendency of PI Joe King Oliver, a former New York City cop, to take on two cases at once lands him in hot water in Edgar winner Mosley's entertaining sequel to 2018's Down the River unto the Sea. When his grandmother's billionaire boyfriend asks him to look into the arrest and incarceration of an alt-right movement leader and race baiter, Joe doubts the validity of the charges, but is reluctant to become involved with a notorious bigot. Meanwhile, the husband of his ex-wife, Monica, has been arrested for selling heating oil as diesel fuel through connections to the Russian mob. Despite Monica's unpleasant combativeness, Joe agrees to investigate for the sake of his high school valedictorian daughter, Aja. Mosley's characteristic writing style is on full display, including his love of unusual similes ("The window gazed upon New Jersey but it was a misty day, making the Garden State look like a half-formed idea"). Joe continues to fascinate as a protagonist, and the secondary characters enrich the story whether they figure into the main action or not. While it may not quite measure up to his outstanding series opener, this is a worthy successor. Agent: Gloria Loomis, Watkins Loomis. (Feb.)

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Kirkus Book Review

At the behest of his friend Roger Ferris, a White billionaire, Black ex-cop Joe King Oliver investigates the government's mysterious detainment of a White nationalist. The 91-year-old Ferris, who lives much of the time with Oliver's strong-willed 93-year-old grandmother, is sure that Alfred Xavier Quiller, poster boy for the alt-right group Men of Action, was set up on charges of murder and selling secrets to the Russians. As odious an individual as Quiller is, Oliver takes on the case as a defender of civil rights. That means returning to Rikers Island, where Quiller is being held--and where Oliver spent three hellish months in solitary after having been framed by dirty cops. The detective, introduced in Down the River Unto the Sea (2018), also has his hands full with the arrest of his ex-wife Monica's husband for his involvement with Russian mobsters in a corporate scheme to sell heating oil as diesel fuel. As knotty as the plot can get, the book is consistently lifted by the intelligence of its characters. Not your everyday zealot, Quiller is a scholar, poet, painter, animal rights activist, and genius inventor--and he's married to a Black woman whose attraction to him in spite of his racism makes her quite the enigma. Mosley is in top form as a social observer: Absolute poverty, muses his protagonist, is being imprisoned: "the experience of being slowly murdered by a state of being." Mosley's reportorial eye is equally sharp in making details count, including the skin tones of his characters. In Oliver's world, it matters that his grandmother is "black as a moonless night on an ancient sea." It also matters that she can get shot in the butt and shrug it off. A strong second outing by Mosley's new hero. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

PI and former cop Joe King Oliver is slowly recovering from the trauma he endured after being imprisoned for crimes he didn't commit (Down the River unto the Sea, 2018). Then he lands in the middle of something that will bring him new nightmares. Inexplicably, Joe's 93-year-old grandmother, Brenda, the daughter of Black sharecroppers, has taken up residence with blue-blooded multibillionaire Roger Ferris, who asks Joe to determine if white nationalist Quiller is innocent of the murder charge against him. Joe wants nothing to do with the repugnant Quiller but agrees to poke around out of loyalty to his grandmother. The more Joe pokes, the more he arouses the lethal ire of rich white men who don't want a Black sleuth getting his hands on a document purportedly in Quiller's possession—one detailing the transgressions of the country's power brokers. The plot takes some overly byzantine turns, but Mosley again shows his talent for character building, not only in the many-sided Joe, as vulnerable as he is resilient, but also in a superb supporting cast, including Joe's daughter, Aja, and mercenary Oliya, who could easily front her own series. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The second King Oliver novel lives up to the excitement generated by its Edgar-winning predecessor. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

In this sequel to the Edgar award—winning Down the River Unto the Sea, Joe King Oliver is asked by uncommonly rich family friend Roger Ferris to determine whether white nationalist Alfred Xavier Quiller was set up when he is accused of murder and of selling sensitive information to the Russians. Assisted by unorthodox bodyguard/mercenary Oliya Ruez, Oliver struggles to grasp the breadth of Quiller's various business dealings while wondering why Ferris is so concerned. With a 100,000-copy first printing.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.
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LJ Express Reviews

Mosley's second "King Oliver" title (after 2018's Down the River unto the Sea) has its former-cop-turned-PI protagonist, Joe King Oliver, swimming in shark-infested waters. He is hired by Roger Ferris during a legal battle with his children over control of their multibillion-dollar company. Complicating matters is Brenda, Joe's grandmother, who happens to be Roger's girlfriend. Summoned to Ferris's mansion, Joe assumes the topic of discussion will be the takeover. Instead, Ferris tells Joe about a man who has been "detained" by the government—a man whom he owes a debt. Then Joe's ex-wife Monica calls, begging him to help her new husband—the man who convinced her to let Joe sit and rot in jail instead of paying bail. But Joe loves their daughter, so he dives into this case. Soon, Joe's neck-deep in white supremacists, Russian mobsters, and shadow organizations, all looking to put him in a body bag. VERDICT Mosley demonstrates once again why he is a master of the craft, weaving a searing look at the concepts of race and social justice into a page-turning crime novel. A complex, compelling protagonist and eclectic supporting cast deepen the pleasure of the read.—Julie Ciccarelli

Copyright 2023 LJExpress.

Copyright 2023 LJExpress.
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PW Annex Reviews

The tendency of PI Joe King Oliver, a former New York City cop, to take on two cases at once lands him in hot water in Edgar winner Mosley's entertaining sequel to 2018's Down the River unto the Sea. When his grandmother's billionaire boyfriend asks him to look into the arrest and incarceration of an alt-right movement leader and race baiter, Joe doubts the validity of the charges, but is reluctant to become involved with a notorious bigot. Meanwhile, the husband of his ex-wife, Monica, has been arrested for selling heating oil as diesel fuel through connections to the Russian mob. Despite Monica's unpleasant combativeness, Joe agrees to investigate for the sake of his high school valedictorian daughter, Aja. Mosley's characteristic writing style is on full display, including his love of unusual similes ("The window gazed upon New Jersey but it was a misty day, making the Garden State look like a half-formed idea"). Joe continues to fascinate as a protagonist, and the secondary characters enrich the story whether they figure into the main action or not. While it may not quite measure up to his outstanding series opener, this is a worthy successor. Agent: Gloria Loomis, Watkins Loomis. (Feb.)

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly Annex.

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly Annex.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Mosley, W., & Graham, D. (2023). Every Man a King (Unabridged). Hachette Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Mosley, Walter and Dion Graham. 2023. Every Man a King. Hachette Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Mosley, Walter and Dion Graham. Every Man a King Hachette Audio, 2023.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Mosley, W. and Graham, D. (2023). Every man a king. Unabridged Hachette Audio.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Mosley, Walter, and Dion Graham. Every Man a King Unabridged, Hachette Audio, 2023.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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