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Parishioner

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A brand-new, eBook original crime novel from bestselling author Walter Mosley, Parishioner is a portrait of a hardened criminal who regrets his past, but whose only hope for redemption is to sin again.
 
In a small town situated between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, a simple church of white stone sits atop a hill on the coast. This nameless house of worship is a sanctuary for the worst kinds of sinners: the congregation and even the clergy have broken all ten Commandments and more. Now they have gathered to seek forgiveness. Xavier Rule—Ecks to his friends—didn’t come to California in search of salvation but, thanks to the grace of this church, he has begun to learn to forgive himself and others for past misdeeds. One day a woman arrives to seek absolution for the guilt she has carried for years over her role in a scheme to kidnap three children and sell them on the black market. As part of atoning for his past life on the wrong side of the law, Ecks is assigned to find out what happened to the abducted children. As he follows the thin trail of the twenty-three-year-old crime, he must struggle against his old, lethal instincts—and learn when to give in to them.

343 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2012

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669 people want to read

About the author

Walter Mosley

206 books3,905 followers
Walter Mosley (b. 1952) is the author of the bestselling mystery series featuring Easy Rawlins, as well as numerous other works, from literary fiction and science fiction to a young adult novel and political monographs. His short fiction has been widely published, and his nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times Magazine and the Nation, among other publications. Mosley is the winner of numerous awards, including an O. Henry Award, the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, a Grammy, and PEN America’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He lives in New York City.

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5 stars
231 (41%)
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213 (38%)
3 stars
90 (16%)
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15 (2%)
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8 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 44 reviews
Profile Image for Lou.
887 reviews925 followers
January 18, 2013
"The nameless church was a safe harbor were a sinner was free to brand himself. Rich men and even royalty resided inside Father Frank's walls. But there, on the hillside of Seabreeze city, all congregants were equal under the Sun and Moon. They didn't mention God because just the word was a weapon in the mouths of men."

Egbert Noland who also goes by the name of Xavier also known as Ecks by most people, you may find him donned in attire of a chocolate shirt and lime jacket, cranberry socks and grapefruit shoes don't let this mislead you a bit.
He can be a cold blooded killer, he has crimes to his name in the past, killed and pimped but since meeting with Father Frank of the church of no name he has become a parishioner, he and any many others like him have had a new lease of life and a chance to turn around their lives through the help of Frank.
He fixes a few things for Frank, some jobs aiding a few desperate souls who want to find missing people or remedy a wrong.
At Frank's behest one job is undertaken by Ecks, it uncovers all kinds of unspeakable crimes, mainly involving the kidnapping, killing and selling of children.

There is a warning here of adult content contained within, various women throw themselves at Ecks, and there are some very serious crimes discussed awakened and uncovered from the past of characters in this tale.

This is a gripping narrative with great dialogue, hypnotic reading.
Mosley can write so well, with sentences with the right words that deliver the moment and pace efficiently, he keeps the reader in the unravelling of mysteries, the characters are felt and seen in your mind due to his well crafted writing. You will learn of characters from different walks of life and of their wanting to do right out of wrong and some just plain bad.

Walter Mosley has a great way of showing you the characters and the scene, read this passage describing a Parishioner:

"There were two skinny women with huge breasts and in impossibly small bikinis sunning themselves in beach chairs on the upper deck of Charlie Mother's yacht; white girls with blond hair, red lips, and skinny legs that looked like they could crush walnuts the size of pillows.
"Ecks!" A man shouted.
He was at least a demigod. Six-six with bronze skin and yellow hair. His eyes were the colour of the ocean, and the muscles beneath the skin of his bare chest and arms undulated like huge snakes under a stain sheet. This defied man strode easily from the pilot's dais onto the upper-deck.
He wore dark blue sweatpants cinched tight to his thirty-inch waist, and his smile belonged to a presidential hopeful: white and contagious."


Ecks is definitely a character I would love the author to take further and I am sure we will hear more from the parishioners. This is a read and an author that many may not know of but needs to be known of.

http://more2read.com/review/parishioner-by-walter-mosley/
Profile Image for David Dacosta.
Author 3 books41 followers
August 5, 2016
Rating: 3.5 stars

Shades of Leonid McGill. Despite beginning as the story of reformed criminals seeking redemption through guidance from a church leader, Parishioner is not too far removed from a McGill mystery. The services of a former gangster known as Xavier Rule have been called upon by his mentor Father Frank to look into, or investigate, a woman at the heart of a child kidnapping scheme dating back decades. Rule’s street smart maneuvering and repartee with cops and people in general closely mirrors another former underworld figure turned sleuth created from the mind of Walter Mosley.

In the spirit of The Man in My Basement, Mosley is once again colouring outside of the lines of his two detective series. His writing remains of a high caliber though there’s a noticeable difference in tone. Something more sinister is at play with Parishioner. Darker and more twisted details surface as this tale progresses. Sure, this is fiction, but a fiction nonetheless based on real happenings in our morally conflicted world.

There’s good, very good, and then there’s masterful. As an author, Walter Mosley deservingly belongs within that latter category. There are attributes to his writing that are unparalleled within the literary space. Whether it be the internal and external dialogue of his characters, or his wildly original descriptions of people, places and things. And then there’s the output. Two, sometimes three titles per year. When I interviewed the author back in 2012, he disclosed that he wrote no more than three hours per day. Those must be very productive daily sessions.
Profile Image for Beverly.
1,711 reviews407 followers
January 19, 2013
Parishioner is a well-written, compelling tale of a man looking for redemption of past deeds that explores the uncommon depth of the dark side of humanity. Mosley’s distinctive mark of flawed complex characters that often need to examine their darker nature against their personal moral agenda coupled with good old-fashioned storytelling is present front and center in this book. The story builds tension with the twists and turns as the crimes past and present are revealed. Some questions were answered at the end but others are left opened, but I am hoping this means it is a start of a new series with these intriguing characters. I recommend to Walter Mosley fans and those who enjoy a dark gritty mystery.
513 reviews4 followers
June 16, 2021
Walter Mosley always delivers. While, this is about an existing character, it can be read as a stand alone with no problem. Transplanting his East coast gangster Xavier Rule to the West coast doesn't soften the urban reality of this character in the least. The plot moves quickly and is so tangled that it is amazing (and satisfying) to see it all resolve. The characters are interesting and diverse, each with their own story, swept up into this action packed mystery. Once you start reading Mosley, you will be hooked and happily he is a prolific writer so there is plenty more to read.
1,090 reviews17 followers
February 19, 2013
Xavier “Ecks” Rule is the 46-year-old eponymous protagonist in this standalone from Walter Mosley, the author of several novels, most notably the Easy Rawlins series, holds the title of Deacon in a nameless church in Southern California, led by a self-ordained minister. It should be said that the church has no denomination, and the 96 members of the congregation, deacons all, have backgrounds as thieves, murders, rapists and one state-certified anarchist. But they have either been drawn to the “church” or been recruited by Father Frank, its leader, who then at some point gives each “missions” in which the skills acquired in their violent pasts are put to good use, all as part of the redemption they seek: “The church was like a prison that worked on the honor system. You were free to repent, but always as an inmate serving a life sentence, with Father Frank as both warden and confessor. . . The one rule of their church was to refrain from passing judgment on one another.”

At its heart, this is a tale of human trafficking and three lost boys, and tracking them, at the behest of another Parishioner, is the mission assigned to Ecks, a former Harlem gangster now making his living delivering newspapers, as well as taking a correspondence course studying religion and literature. The book is replete with unrelenting violence, sex and brutality, seemingly as natural as breathing to the continually growing cast of characters, this last making the book frequently difficult to navigate and at times to distinguish one from another. Needless to say, there are numerous murders and much other violence throughout the book.

The often poetic writing is typical of this author’s work. I particularly liked the descriptions of many of the characters, e.g., “he was so thin and wan that he blended into the washed-out fabric like a chameleon might subtly come to resemble branch and leaf.” A dark world is portrayed here, one that I suspect is foreign to many, if not most, readers, but that said, there is much to enjoy here, and with that caveat, it is recommended.
Profile Image for Chris.
2,105 reviews29 followers
April 15, 2025
Terrible people. Dark, sordid, and disturbing characters trying to make amends but doing it in violent and deceitful ways. Not your typical church. More like a cult for reformed reprobates. It gets too complicated and incomprehensible with all the deceit and aliases. It's all about the Benjamins. The main character I kept visualizing Ice Cube portraying him. He's a killer with a code who is on a quest to do the right thing. I enjoyed his journey but he waded through so much evil and nastiness.
Profile Image for Hannahlynn.
35 reviews1 follower
October 16, 2023
If there were 6 stars, Mosley would get them all

Just as all of Mosley’s books this book is powerfully written. It’s extremely graphic and covers extremely horrible crimes, so don’t read it if you’re prone to depression, anxiety, or even just having a bad day. But, oh! My god. What a story. Mosley’s characters always portray the evil and good humans are capable of. His protagonists are always stronger than their misdeeds. The parishioner is no different in that regard, but the way his soul is searched and the amount of Blackness he presents are at the heart of a crazy, crazy story. It is a page-turner to the end. If you love redemption, you will find a place for this story.
14 reviews
August 21, 2021
A bit much….

Love reading the Easy Rawlings stories: however this one was a bit much. Just too darn many characters and too much head scratching for me to loop it all together to figure it out. I do not like having to guess an outcome or situation nor do l like having to flip back and re read pages to see if l missed something to continue and still not know what the author is conveying. Started to give up several times but made it to the end. Too bad Walter doesn’t have a website so that readers could correspond with him about his books. Guess tho he is a busy man….on to his next hit, shucks.
Profile Image for Terry Slaven.
227 reviews2 followers
June 28, 2022
This is a strange novel. A hardened criminal from the East Coast has moved to Los Angeles and has been recruited by an unorthodox preacher to join his congregation. The cultish congregation is populated by repentant sinners from disparate walks of life who are seemingly manipulated by the pastor to accomplish various shadowy ends. The titular character, known by various aliases, is directed to assist a visiting woman who wants to right a wrong committed in her past. And from that point, the plot goes berserk in all directions. There is redemption in there somewhere. Not my favorite of Mosley’s novels.
Profile Image for Scooby Doo.
879 reviews
November 3, 2018
DNF 92% If you can buy the central conceit of a church of reformed criminals then the story is an unusual detective story that has Mosley's typical eye for detailed characters. But at 92% when the depth of the plot is being revealed, there were too many twists for my little mind to follow (as if often the case for me with Mosley novels), and I wasn't invested enough in the "victims" to care about the final outcome.
Profile Image for STEPHEN TORNIO.
55 reviews
March 7, 2024
I never tire or reading Walter Mosley whether is is Easy Rawlins, Leonid McGill or his one offs like Ptolemy Grey or this one, Parishioner. Xavier, Ecks, is not what would be labeled a good man in the normal world most of us live in. He is however, a good man in the world he lives in. Mosley takes you to a world most of us do not know and find hard to accept, but, in the end, you do accept it and you leave this book with the hope that Eck finds the happiness that has escaped him.
807 reviews5 followers
May 14, 2021
Very violent and describes some horrible crimes. But I liked it. An interesting premise for the “detective” story. The story is complex and there are a lot of characters, but it gets sorted out clearly in the end. The weaving of Xavier’s personal life, the religion, and the plot is done well. There is action to keep it moving and I finished in two days.
Profile Image for M.
1,558 reviews8 followers
May 20, 2024
WOW! A special thanks to Mona GH for this author-superbly written, an awesome plot, great backstory of the “church” and parishioners; but an evil and gruesome side to follow the twists and turns! “When you were eighteen months old your parents left you at a daycare center, where you were kidnapped with two other boys. Your new parents bought you from a slaver.” Enjoy
Profile Image for Tom.
45 reviews
May 18, 2025
I consider myself a big Walter Mosley fan. This book just didn't do it for me. The silly names, the belabored sentences, the convoluted dialogue.

There were some glimmering examples of Mosley's talent hidden in there, but I rate this the lowest of all of the Mosley books that I've read. Can't recommend it.
1 review
July 21, 2019
Strong Read

Walter Mosley always write very good books and the Parishioner is no different. A new character but there were too many parts that felt like other characters with a new name.
19 reviews
Read
March 23, 2022
I was so disappointed😩

Usually, Walter Monkey's stories keep me guessing but maintain my interest. This story was dark, tiring and convoluted. I guess not every story can be stellar.
Profile Image for Mary Rowe.
2,626 reviews8 followers
February 6, 2017
Another snappy tale from the master, about Los Angeles and its mean streets, and the transplants and locals that inhabit them. Rough, raw, lyrical.
1 review
February 24, 2021
Another great Mosley title. Suspense and great characters. I gave it a four star just because there are a few other titled of his I have liked more, but you won't be disappointed.
20 reviews
April 29, 2021
Walter Mosley has done it again!

This is one of Walter Mosley’s best books! He is an excellent storyteller! I hope that he continues with these new characters.
29 reviews
November 19, 2022
excellent plot.

Enjoyed the deep side inuindos to good and bad. If you want to win you have to be honest with yourself.
Profile Image for Mike Stott.
5 reviews2 followers
October 23, 2023
great read

Lots of characters to keep track of. Really full of thought provoking dilemnas. I enjoed those read Great last line
Profile Image for Andre(Read-A-Lot).
698 reviews292 followers
January 6, 2013
This is vintage Walter Mosley, abundant characters, good story and suspense aplenty. The Parishioner centers around Egbert Noland, aka Xavier Rule, who goes by the name Ecks. There aren't many who are better than Mosley when it comes to creating depth in his protagonists. He does this with Ecks to great effect. He fills in the contours of his life throughout the course of the novel, so you never get the feeling that Ecks is somewhat fanciful. This is very important to this particular story, because there is a lot going on and many crazy individuals doing many kooky things.

The Parishioner is a busy novel, and honestly it may be a bit convoluted. You may need a scorecard to keep up with all the murder and mayhem. There is a "church" of no denomination, a kidnapping scheme, a killer for hire scenario and some porn thrown in for good measure. So, you may find yourself saying, "what?" Mosley tries to wrap all this around Ecks, a parishioner of the church, who is asked to find 3 boys who were stolen at a young age.

Mosley mostly succeeds in this endeavor mainly for the reasons I mention below. If there is a failing, it is in the ending. It's like Mosley got tired of writing and said let me tie all this together and bring it to a close. The conclusion feels rushed like he was running out of time. I've experienced this before with other Mosley books and I find it problematic. Not that I expect a nice tidy feel-great conclusion, but you can't seemingly have everything come together and details rushing from everywhere in a conversation between two characters, that feeds the feeling of clumsiness and hastiness.

Every time I finish a Mosley novel, I find myself people watching, I mean really watching and noting details about strangers. The way he depicts people, their color, features, style and disposition is uncanny. And so in real life, I find myself often wondering how Mosley would describe a particular individual. I absolutely love this about Mosley, that skill of vividness really puts you right in the book and keeps you interested in all the various characters you meet in a Mosley novel.


Thanks to the ebook revolution, authors are able to be more productive without waiting for the traditionally slow publishing cycle. I hope more authors of Mosley's stature take the opportunity to write ebooks. The consumer will be the ultimate winner. As for The Parishioner, it is definitely worth reading, and despite the busyness of the novel, and the hasty ending, I will go 4 stars, because I can't go 3.5, and it's closer to 4 than it is to 3, so enjoy.
Profile Image for Pamela.
686 reviews17 followers
January 15, 2013
The Hero is a member of an unusual church consisting of parishioners that have committed numerous crimes and have a variety of illicit skills. They are lead by a charismatic pastor that sends them on "missions" to promote their healing and self awareness.

One such mission is assigned to the H and the story begins, filled with amazing secondary characters and an intriguing mystery to be solved. Each character is so well written that I could see them each having their own book. The author is smart and doesn't allow these characters to detract from the main story line, but uses them to enhance and give depth to the story.

The dialogue is rich and it is wonderful to read a book written by an author that understands the English language.

I was held captive by this story and found myself unable to put the book down. The ending fulfilled my need for a HEA, but not one that is overly neat and tidy.

ARC provided by Netgalley.
97 reviews5 followers
July 9, 2013
This is a long and somewhat apocryphal tale of redemption about an former uber-criminal who has joined a mysterious cult-like and secretive church for outsiders and reprobates like himself - he is tasked to undertake a fantastic mission that involves a long-standing kidnapping and child human trafficking network. Most of the characters encountered are major league bad actors and the story involves some incredible machinations.

More of a parable than a realistic depiction of more routine criminal activities, it was still an enjoyable read. I prefer the Easy Rawlins level of local crime story, but this variation from that "norm" was worth the effort....
Profile Image for Doug.
825 reviews
February 16, 2013
For me, many of Mosley's books revolve around a flawed hero. The bad person trying to redeem self or help others by doing a mix of good/bad things towards a good end. I'm torn between reading some really good writing and seeing the (very rough) world that seems to fill his characters eyes. Yes, there are some good people in his world(s), but many are caught in the meat grinder of the lower levels, where escape/redemption seems to come with a definite cost.

While I don't like seeming to leave my comments without resolution, I blame my ambivalence. This is some really good writing that deals with difficult things.
Profile Image for Rochelle Brandon.
Author 2 books9 followers
April 26, 2013
Once again Mosley takes me into the mind of a sociopath and gives me reason to love him. This book looks at what happens when a young criminal grows up, grows wiser, develops a conscientious to become a true man. The mystery solving is engaging, but not as much as the character of Ecks, a hardcore gangster, who has found faith in the teachings of Brother Frank at a seaside unnamed church. Frank has a request of Ecks that sets him on a path that challenges his new found faith. Intriguing read! Mosley has a talent for getting us into the minds of men. I always find his writing fascinating.
Profile Image for Hyacinth Le'optimist.
20 reviews2 followers
March 28, 2014
This story was gritty vintage W.M.
Xavier Rule, aka Ecks, aka Eggbert Noland is torn between the person he was and the person he thinks he wants to be and has sought the assistance of Father Frank to help guide him on his journey.

Many unexpected twists and turns, brilliant poetic one liners, and overall a good story that makes you say hmmmm and ask yourself, who I s the sinner in need of saving?????
Profile Image for Troy.
273 reviews26 followers
December 27, 2012
I think my Walter Mosley fandom is predicated on how likable and flawed his characters are. No one's perfect, but they're trying to get better, and the redemption is, at the least, strived for.
I found this a slow read, in a couple of ways. Past books, of the Easy series and whatnot, are books you simply can't put down. THis was slow-paced and methodical, and yet and still I was engaged, Writing mastery, I think.
Profile Image for David.
1,704 reviews16 followers
January 1, 2013
A cross between the two recent, mystical books by Mosley and his harder crime books. A parish of fairly intense and immoral criminals follows Father Frank who accepts them and helps them deal with their pasts. One parishioner is given a special assignment in which he must solve a really terrible crime and work out his own difficulties. Well done.
Profile Image for Phillip Duck.
Author 16 books33 followers
January 6, 2013
What can I say? It's Mosley, which equates to the best of the best. Never a let down, when I open one of his books. This tale surpassed my naturally high expectations for him, and continued to delight me the for the entire read. Most intriguing characters and a story idea that I wished I had thought of and created. Must read!
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