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  1. #WritersCoffeeClub ~ Recommend a book that had an impact on your prose.

    Elements of Fiction by Walter Mosley. A kaleidoscope of creativity. A genuine treasure. 💎

    I'm yet to find a good book on metaphors. If you have perhaps any suggestions?

    #WalterMosley #Writing

  2. Walter Mosley - Diabeł w błękitnej sukience

    Oswojony z klimatem noir za sprawą książek Chandlera postanowiłem dać szansę innym autorom tego nurtu. Pierwszym strzałem była kupiona za grosze powieść “Diabeł w błękitnej sukience” Waltera Mosleya.

    Link do wpisu 🔗
    xiegozbior.pl/zajawki/2025/04/

    #fediksiazki #bookstodon #książki #WalterMosley #emg #noir #kryminały
    @ksiazki

    Pełny wpis w wątku poniżej! ⬇️

  3. #ScribesAndMakers 17 Mar: What's your favourite book about writing, or your other craft?

    Elements of Fiction by Walter Mosley. Such a rare, valuable insight on the topic, amazing book and author.

    #WalterMosley

  4. "We talked about her eyes for a half hour. And then he started to tell me things that men should never say about their women. Not sex, but he talked about how she'd hold him to her breast when he was afraid and how she'd stand up for him when a shopkeeper or waiter tried to walk over him."

    I can't believe #waltermosley invented the "Excuse me, he asked for no pickles" woman.

    #devilinabluedress #literature #quote

  5. Read Walter Mosely’s DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS and was so struck by this paragraph, which perfectly encapsulates so much of noir - you get the thing or the woman you’ve always dreamed of and instead of making your life better, it makes your life hell.
    #books #noir #easyrawlins #waltermosley

  6. #365Stories in 2023 - 55/365
    --
    "The Thief" (1995)
    by Walter Mosley

    Ex-convict Socrates is having dinner at Iula's Diner when a younger man, Wilfred, arrives, flashing a large amount of cash. Wilfred brags about his lifestyle as he and Socrates debate his methods, and who is really paying for his actions.

    Mosley explores pride and shame, right and wrong, in a story that Esquire describes as an "edgy philosophical throw-down."

    #Books
    #Bookstodon
    @bookstodon
    #CrimeFiction
    #Reading
    #WalterMosley

  7. On #WalterMosley #novelist #Tuesday#BlackHistoryMonth #Diaspora #AntiRacist #DetRawlings #literature
    Cool article on a great writer
    "He is published in 24 countries. Yet he bridles at the persistent "crime writer" tag. Besides his Easy Rawlins and Fearless Jones mysteries, he has created a ghetto philosopher, Socrates Fortlow, a "blues novel", science fiction and a "non-aligned attack on capitalism", Workin' On the Chain Gang (2000). He also writes for theatre and film."
    theguardian.com/books/2003/sep

  8. 'I was struggling to update my corkboard when I read this exquisitely pulpy line: “Lawler was a New York blue blood who married a nouveau riche nobody named Constantine Psomas — a.k.a. the can man.” Warmth filled my guts like whiskey. I didn’t need a map. Mosley was driving me to Rikers in a cream-colored Bianchina, and Mingus was playing on the stereo. I was along for the ride.'

    #WalterMosley #books #bookshelf

    nytimes.com/2023/02/17/books/r

  9. Latest read, The Good News Is (2020) by Walter Mosley, from The Awkward Black Man. Samson Diehl discovers his weight loss isn't from skipping ice cream, it's from cancer. His already tenuous romances fail and in his loneliness he falls in love with his nurse.
    Depicts a vulnerability in black men that media often doesn't show.

    #Books #ShortStory #WalterMosley #BlackArt

  10. You might could dig these multiple modals

    A passage from Walter Mosley’s Devil in a Blue Dress:

    Joppy stopped wiping [the bar] for a moment and looked me in the eye.
    “Don’t get me wrong, Ease. DeWitt is a tough man, and he runs in bad company. But you still might could get that mortgage payment an’ you might even learn sumpin’ from’im.”

    That ‘might could get’ was a serendipitous phrase to encounter. Over the preceding days I’d come across several treatments of what are known as double modals or multiple modals, and had been considering a blog post about them. Hint taken.

    Brad Dourif in ‘Deadwood’

    First, a technical note on modals. These are a small and grammatically unusual family of verbs. They’re a subset of the auxiliary (helper) verbs and so are sometimes called modal auxiliaries. They qualify other verbs in a verb phrase, influencing the overall meaning: I can go, you may be, she must try. Geoffrey Pullum says there are 8–12 of them in English:

    can, may, shall, will, dare, must, need, ought

    He and Rodney Huddleston mention could, might, should and would as the preterite forms (past tense marked by inflection) of the first four. Grammarians differ slightly in naming the family members; this depends on the category boundaries, and needn’t concern us here.

    Modals are used to indicate modality, or ‘mood’ – not in the sense of atmosphere, but to express possibility, permission, obligation, necessity, deduction, prediction and such things. Heather Marie Kosur writes that modality ‘allows language users to express what is, what would be, what may be, and what should be’.

    Modern grammar generally divides modality into two or three branches: epistemic (probability, deduction, necessity) and deontic (duty, obligation, permission), and sometimes also dynamic (factual). See this glossary, or Kosur’s essay for a more detailed treatment.

    Unlike lexical verbs, modals have no to-infinitives, no –s forms for subject agreement, and no tenses formed with be or have. So you don’t see oughting, mights or musted, etc. At least, not normally (James Joyce, Finnegans Wake: ‘when cherries next come back to Ealing as come they must, as they musted in their past’).

    *

    And so to double or multiple modals: might could, may would and the like.

    Megan Risdal, in a recent post at For the Love of Linguistics, used a map of ‘might could’ usage to gauge its geographic distribution in the U.S. She also studied the reactions double modals inspire, and shared her thoughtful observations.

    As I wrote in a comment there, double modals are not in my idiolect, but I find them charming. They’re also interesting grammatically, semantically, and sociolinguistically. They may be used with subtlety by those to whom they come naturally: to modify the degree of likelihood or speculation expressed, for example.

    Multiple modals also popped up in an article on the influence of Scotch-Irish [PDF] on East Tennessee grammar, which John Cowan shared in a comment to my recent post on Hiberno-English till. The article’s author, Michael Montgomery, is one of the people behind MultiMo: The Database of Multiple Modals, which launched last week.

    MultiMo offers, among other things, a multi-page table of reported examples, including some rare and delightful triple modals:

    I might could should write home.

    It’s a long way and he might will can’t come, but I’m gonna ask.

    Aren’t they amazing? What is grammatical in standard English is often erroneously equated with what is grammatical, period. But grammaticality differs with dialect, and standard English is just one dialect (or a set of them) — privileged socially but not linguistically.

    If you’re still with me, and you might would be hungry for more, Language Log has analysed double modals on several occasions; for starters see this post by Ben Zimmer and the pages it links to.

    I’ll conclude as I began, with Devil in a Blue Dress:

    I always tried to speak proper English in my life, the kind of English they taught in school, but I found over the years that I could only truly express myself in the natural, “uneducated” dialect of my upbringing.

    Update: More discussion of double modals at Language Hat, who says:

    They are a peripheral part of my dialect thanks to my Ozark ancestors, and while I don’t use them on a daily basis, I delight in tossing them into the mix once in a while; they give me that warm down-home feeling.

    #crimeFiction #dialects #grammar #language #linguistics #modalVerbs #modality #modals #multipleModals #semantics #syntax #usage #verbs #WalterMosley #words