Rate this book

Los Angeles Stories, Los (2014)

by Ry Cooder(Favorite Author)
3.48 of 5 Votes: 4
ISBN
1283301180 (ISBN13: 9781283301183)
languge
English
genre
publisher
City Lights Books
review 1: Three and a half stars. The essential vibe is spot on. The ambiance. Perfect. My two favorite stories are "Gun shop boogie" and "Smile". "Gun shop boogie" I related to as I know the Sierra Highway environs well and Ry Cooder captures it's essence perfectly. "Smile" intrigued me with the development of the principal character, Sonny Kloer. He is a war veteran/musician who makes false teeth for Walgreen's to support himself. I liked the story as it is odd. All of the stories are LA odd in fact. Abstract. I can't follow them. I am a fan of Ry Cooder as a very gifted musician so I assume that I lack what it takes to get my mind around these stories. Sigh.
review 2: "I had made up my mind to quit worrying. Los Angeles was the Land of the Brighter Day, something goo
... mored was bound to turn up."These last two lines sum up the motivation that lies with the numerous characters that musician Ry Cooder offers up in his new collection of short stories. While the stories are nominally linked, the variety is enormous: mariachi players, park prophets, backalley dentists, tailors, and disc jockeys are all introduced in their native milieu. Set in the first half of the twentieth century, these stories are based on the inner life of the inner city. This is not postcard or travel agency Los Angeles; there is no glamour or celebrities to dress it up. Even the weather doesn't seem to cooperate with stereotype: fog and rain are as frequent as bar brawls. The characters are the faceless many that work off the books, just trying to get by while the city appears as a predatory character, breathing and pulsing, foiling any attempts at the good life.The collection is also an excellent geography text to significant Los Angeles locations--Griffith Park, Chinatown, Little Tokyo, Union Station, Bunker Hill, and Hollenbeck Park all serve as backdrops, and Cooder seems to know the streets and back alleys very well. Cocktail bars and bowling alleys are among the seedy gathering places of the working class and small time criminals that Cooder writes about and who occasionally cross tracks with each other.My favorite was "Who do you know that I don't?" set in 1949, wherein a tailor to the mariachi clientele attempts to solve the murder of a popular jazz musician, Johnny Mumford. Cooder creates a world of layaway payments, shiny and finned cars, and musicians desperate to wear a good suit but not eager to pay. Memorably, the tailor even makes one suit to be shared by two musicians who can't afford their own, later assisting them to escape the cops while he helps search for links to the murder. A prize collection of 78 records becomes a significant clue.Another story focuses on a resourceful guy whose job is to fill in the details on the City Directory, going door-to-door to collect information from suspicious citizens in boardinghouses and side streets. The essential absurdity of compiling an accurate book aside, Frank is diligent and thorough. Though he's essentially a simple man, his path crosses with three suspicious murders and suddenly he's a suspect:"Once they see a pattern, they think they know it all, and they think they got you. That's not the way life is. Take it from me, life is random and inscrutable, like the City Directory."The stories are well-plotted and heavily detailed, and the characters feel real. Cooder develops each protagonist well, and creates their world for the reader in inscrutable detail. In fact, that may be one of my only concerns about the collection: at times I felt like there was too much name-dropping and references to streets and neighborhoods and pop culture of the period. Sometimes, the many facts slowed down and derailed the narrative from its pace. I think the same effect could have been achieved without so many points of reference and still have remained realistic. less
Reviews (see all)
mou
Very film noir -- Raymond Chandler, Philip Marlowe, Charles Bukowski
Tiffany
Overall, a good collection of short stories by Ry Cooder.
mdntgirl
A little repetitive, but constantly engaging.
willowbarnbabe
Interesting slices of time and place.
Write review
Review will shown on site after approval.
(Review will shown on site after approval)