

While he is ignoring all of his problems – or, drinking and gambling them away – the bills continue to stack up. Instead of working, Blakely begins to mosey through the world, playing frequent card games with his friends Ricky and Clarence, drinking, and having affairs with a plethora of women. Despite his financial troubles, he doesn't seem particularly interested in getting a job to solve his money problems. Recently fired from his job when the novel begins, he struggles to pay the property taxes and for the upkeep on the family home.


Now thirty-three years old, Blakely, the sole inheritor of the house, lives there by himself, generally ambling through life without much motivation or drive to make something of his time on Earth. Charles Blakely is descended from a family of free blacks who built an enormous home, which has been passed down now for seven generations. The novel itself, however, is more concerned with the lives of Blakely and Bennet, their motivations, and the way they navigate the influence of their ancestry. The premise of the novel is relatively simple: Bennet asks Blakely if he can rent the basement of his family home for a few months, for the cost of $50,000. In this novel, Mosley strays away from his conventions to explore ideas of power, race and racism, inheritance, and punishment through the characters of Charles Blakely and Anniston Bennet. The Man in My Basement is a philosophical novel and work of literary fiction by Walter Mosley, who is more commonly known for his mystery novels.
