‘Cahokia Jazz’ by Francis Spufford
23 February 2024
I came to Francis Spufford’s third novel, ‘Cahokia Jazz’, having really enjoyed his debut novel ‘Golden Hill’ (reviewed here in August 2017) and its successor ‘Light Perpetual’ (reviewed here in July 2021). ‘Cahokia Jazz’ (which I read as an unabridged audio book, narrated by Andy Ingalls) is another shift of period and style from Spufford - a noir crime tale echoing Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, set in 1920s America. But this is an alternative reality America - a parallel universe in which the fictional midwest city of Cahokia is dominated by a First Nations people who are led by a hereditary monarchy and have embraced a version of European catholicism. The book starts with police officers investigating a murder and has all the tropes of a gumshoe detective story. But the racial and religious backdrop to the mystery - drawn in fastidious detail - creates a deeply unnerving mood. When, towards the end of the novel, one of the characters suggests that they are all living in a dream and none of this is real, it feels cathartically believable: the whole novel has a dreamlike quality. Francis Spufford’s writing is beautiful and he creates an extensive cast of well-drawn, sympathetic characters. The detective partners Drummond and Barrow - one short and talkative, the other huge and taciturn - reminded me of George and Lennie in John Steinbeck’s ‘Of Mice and Men’. And the American period setting of ‘Cahokia Jazz’ made me think of 'The Lincoln Highway' by Amor Towles (reviewed here in February 2022). ‘Cahokia Jazz’ is not quite as satisfying a novel as ‘Golden Hill’ but it’s another fascinating period drama from Francis Spufford and I look forward to seeing which genre he chooses to tackle next.
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