It is 1919, the Great War is over, and the
servicemen are returning. New Orleans is a melting pot of colours, creeds and
ethnicities – Negroes, Creoles, Sicilians and Irish all have their place, their
culture and segregated communities. The one area they mix in freely is the Old
Town where jazz music is emerging, drink is flowing and illicit sex is for
sale.
The shadow over them all is a serial killer
on the loose whose modus operandi is brutal, bludgeoning his victims with an
axe, always left at the scene, always accompanied by a different tarot card
inserted into the gaping wound. So far the dead have all been Italian
shopkeepers so the involvement of the local mafia, the Family, is suspected,
whether as target, perpetrator or both.
Three people are on the Axeman’s trail:
Detective Lieutenant Michael Talbot is given the unenviable task of leading the
police investigation; Luca D’Andrea, ex-detective, ex-con (just released after
serving five years for his corrupt mafia connections) is commissioned by the
head of the Family to find out who is targeting his organisation; and Ida
Davis, aspiring Pinkerton detective (though currently their office girl on the
spot), wants to solve the case to prove she is worthy of promotion to an
operational role.
Each has a different way into the web of
clues and deception. Talbot can use official police files and intelligence;
Luca has access to the Sicilian underworld; and Ida, helped by talented young
cornet player Lewis Armstrong (who maybe became Louis Armstrong), can engage
with the black community inaccessible to the others. Of course they each have
their personal issues to resolve as well. Much more than justice depends on the
outcome of the chase.
More people get hacked to death before the
three pursuers (largely working in ignorance of each other) start to close in. The
climax is heightened when the rain begins to fall and a hurricane blows in.
Who, if anyone, will catch the Axeman; how will the aftermath of the chase
change their lives?
It is a good atmospheric read to find out.
The three pronged investigation is an interesting and (for me) novel approach
in the genre; however keeping track of which of them knows what and when is a
challenge. The immersion in the location is total and the research seems
meticulous (the events are based on fact – a serial killer did terrorise New
Orleans in 1918-19) so this would be a great book to read while visiting the
Big Easy. And it is a pretty good one even if stuck at home.
No comments:
Post a Comment