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The Last Days of Louisiana Red

The Last Days of Louisiana Red (1974) is a novel written by Ishmael Reed. It is considered a model novel of the Black Arts Movement and contains many elements of postmodernism. It continues the story of the character Papa LaBas introduced in Reed's previous novel, 1972's Mumbo Jumbo. The book emphasises voodoo.[1][2] According to Kirkus Reviews, "Reed's hoodoo/mojo/gris gris/Mumbo Jumbo has a wickedly funny vitality that undermines white European ideology."[3]

Plot summary

The Last Days of Louisiana Red, which has been described as a "HooDoo detective story and a comprehensive satire on the explosive politics of the '60s",[4] set amidst the racial violence of Berkeley, California.[5] The story follows investigator Papa LaBas as he tries to figure out who murdered Ed Yellings, the proprietor of the Solid Gumbo Works. In the story, Labas finds himself fighting the rising tide of violence propagated by Louisiana Red and the militant opportunists, the Moochers. Eventually, Labas learns that the murder has been a conspiracy to dethrone the Gumbo business because Ed was trying to create medicine that would stop heroin addiction.

Characters

References

  1. ^ "The Last Days of Louisiana Red: A Novel" at Google Books.
  2. ^ Last Days of Louisiana Red | American Literature Series", Dalkey Archive Press.
  3. ^ "The Last Days of Louisiana Red" Kirkus Reviews, October 22, 1974.
  4. ^ "The Last Days of Louisiana Red" at FantasticFiction.
  5. ^ "Ishmael Reed", Encyclopædia Britannica.

External links