Cahokia Jazz

A Novel

Inbunden, 436 sidor

På English

Publicerades 2024 av Scribner.

ISBN:
978-1-6680-2545-1
Kopierade ISBN!
OCLC-nummer:
1384411771

Visa i OpenLibrary

From “one of the most original minds in contemporary literature” (Nick Hornby) the bestselling and award-winning author of Golden Hill delivers a noirish detective novel set in the 1920s that reimagines how American history would be different if, instead of being decimated, indigenous populations had thrived.

Like his earlier novel Golden Hill, Francis Spufford’s Cahokia Jazz inhabits a different version of America, now through the lens of a subtly altered 1920s—a fully imagined world full of fog, cigarette smoke, dubious motives, danger, dark deeds. And in the main character of Joe Barrow, we have a hero of truly epic proportions, a troubled soul to fall in love with as you are swept along by a propulsive and brilliantly twisty plot.

On a snowy night at the end of winter, Barrow and his partner find a body on the roof of a skyscraper. Down below, streetcar bells ring, factory …

5 utgåvor

Astonishing masterpiece

This book does so many things, and all outstandingly. It's a portrait of a Cahokia that in our timeline was never allowed to exist. It's a noir detective thriller. It's an intense character study of a deeply relatable protagonist. It's a love poem to 1920s jazz--the music and the cultural space it created.

I'm having difficulty actually talking about it coherently without massive spoilers. So just go on and read this book.

No small accomplishment

A tad overstuffed, but (because of this?) succeeds as (all of) hardboiled noir, speculative anthropology, and cathartic routing of white supremacy, which is no small accomplishment. Could have done with a more low-key ending, in my opinion, for some light and shade, but superb writing and characterisation throughout, with more than a few lines that elicited audibly-impressed noises. This alt-history nerd left happy.

None

Now this was just endlessly entertaining. Alternate history liberally sprinkled with jazz, linguistics, power structures, hardboiled detectives and some really neat worldbuilding, that's just a great way to start the reading year. Is it THE most indepth, hard-hitting look at race and class relations in the (OK, a) US? No. But it uses its narrative and the world it creates to create a utopia of what might be without making it all too simple. I'm sure you can ask whether a white Brit is the one who should be telling this story, but it IS a world that never got to be, so nobody's lived in it; just the ones who read this story. And it's a story that keeps finding new stones to turn over. Cue up a good prohibition-era playlist, pour yourself a gimlet and dig in.

Ämnen

  • English literature