An outstanding book! How has SUNSET SWING been overlooked? It was the winner of both the CWA Gold Dagger and the CWA Historical Dagger in 2022, yet it only has 90 written reviews on Goodreads and I stumbled across it by chance, not as a result of reading a review from one of my Goodreads “friends”, many of whom read the latest thrillers/mysteries before I do. (Which is how I usually discover new books/authors to sample, because many of my Goodreads “friends” get access to new books sooner than I do.) Maybe the problem is that the CWA is a U.K. organization, yet this novel is set in the U.S. It straddles two reading communities, neither of whom has adopted it as one of their own.
The setting for SUNSET SWING is Los Angeles in 1967 and thus this is considered “historical fiction”. This backdrop is especially appealing to me because I lived in Los Angeles from 1959 to 1963. (Alas!—to be so old that my impetuous, daring years are now considered a “historical” period in time.) Many of the locales described are familiar to me—they hadn’t changed that much between 1963 and 1967. (They would be unrecognizable now, but live on in my memories.)
SUNSET SWING begins by following three different POVs:
(1) Ida Young, age 67, is a retired detective, trying to write her memoirs but restless; she is secretly happy to be called to consult on the latest murder scene of the Night-Slayer, a serial killer who is terrorizing the city—he appears to select innocent victims randomly and his killing scenes are chaotic and horrifying.
(2) Kerry Gaudet is in her early twenties, an army nurse whose face and body have been scarred by a traumatic encounter in Vietnam. She is using her week’s R&R leave to search for her young brother who arrived in Los Angeles several months earlier after running away from the group home in Louisiana. She is desperate because the last letter she received from him suggested that he was involved in a dangerous enterprise.
(3) Dante Sanfillipo is a mob “fixer”, looking forward to retiring at a newly acquired vineyard in Napa Valley, unhappy about being summoned by the head of the local mafia for a “last” job—find the mob boss’s son, a bail jumper, who may be dead. If dead, Dante is tasked with finding his body.
Initially, the pursuits of these three characters appear to be unrelated. The only thing in common among the three story lines is that each character listens to Chet Baker singing ‘Alone Together’ on the radio. For readers who know about Baker’s history of heroin abuse, this provides a clue to the direction that overall scenario will take.
While Kerry searches for her brother, Ida analyses the Night-Slayer’s reasoning, and Dante tracks down the boss’s son (or his body), their stories slowly intersect, with suggestions of one big conspiracy. The action occurs midst the mayhem that is occurring during a Santa Ana fuelled fire—very relevant during this summer when wind-fuelled fires are taking place throughout the world.
There is a fourth POV that occurs sparingly, that of Louis Armstrong. I am always hesitant when a ‘real’ person is placed in a fictional context, particularly when the story contains imaginary thoughts and actions of that ‘real’ person. The author handled this fairly well, not steering far from known facts about Armstrong, who plays a very minor role in the plot.
I loved this one because of its historic description of Los Angeles, the interspersing of jazz into the theme, and its portrayal of three strong women—Ida, Kerry, and Dante’s wife Loretta. It includes revelations about the role of sacrosanct U.S. government agencies in drug smuggling, which may have made it unpopular in the U.S. (In his endnotes, the author provides sources to support allegations about members of these sacrosanct agencies and their role in the drug trade.)
This is the final book in Ray Celestin’s City Blues Quartet. I haven’t read the first three novels but this one can be read as a standalone. Hopefully, my library will eventually get ebook copies of the first three instalments. I was lucky to pick up SUNSET SWING in a kindle sale.