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Jazz Moon
Jazz Moon
Jazz Moon
Audiobook10 hours

Jazz Moon

Written by Joe Okonkwo

Narrated by Sean Crisden

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

On a sweltering summer night in 1925, beauties in beaded dresses mingle with hepcats in dapper suits on the streets of Harlem. The air is thick with reefer smoke, and jazz pours out of speakeasy doorways. Ben Charles and his devoted wife, Angeline, are among the locals crammed into a basement club to hear jazz and drink bootleg liquor. For aspiring poet Ben, the swirling, heady rhythms are a revelation. So is Baby Back Johnston, an ambitious trumpet player who flashes a devilish grin and blasts jazz dynamite from his horn. Ben finds himself drawn to the trumpeter-and to Paris, where Baby Back says everything is happening.

In Paris, jazz and champagne flow eternally, and blacks are welcomed as exotic celebrities, especially those from Harlem. It's an easy life that quickly leaves Ben adrift and alone, craving solace through anonymous dalliances in the city's decadent underground scene. From chic Parisian cafes to seedy opium dens, his odyssey will bring new love, trials, and heartache, even as echoes from the past urge him to decide where true fulfillment and inspiration lie.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 31, 2016
ISBN9781515974727

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Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I found this book for a couple of dollars at my local Goodwill, and it had an interesting premise, so I didn’t think I could really lose much by picking it up. It is thicker than it looks; I wouldn’t say it’s particularly expansive, but it is an easy read regardless of how large it appears to be. I got through it in less than a week (my typical read is about one book every week or two), and I enjoyed the book from beginning to end.SOME (BUT NOT MAJOR) SPOILERSThe main character is Ben Charles, a man who starts off living in the Harlem Jazz Age, and eventually moves to Paris. He’s a hard worker who enjoys writing poetry in his spare time, devoted to his best friend and wife... At least in the beginning. But then he starts to experience a sexual reawakening. He’s always been into men, but he’s squashed his feelings down, leaving a hollowness inside that is suddenly filled and ignited when he meets hot-headed, charismatic trumpet player Baby Back Johnston.Let’s just say that Ben’s carefully coordinated life sort of spirals away from him, and because of the actions that occur through several years, he finds himself again in Paris. Ben is not a likable character, in my opinion, which I really dig. He’s not a typical hero, but rather a complex, tortured individual who struggles with his own sexually, his place in the world as an African American, and his duty to his former wife and societies’ view on his sexuality and his identity. He indulges in debauchery, hurts people, and is in turn hurt by people as well. But in the end, he finds who he was always meant to be and he finds a semblance of peace.END SPOILERSTHE VERDICT:I liked the book overall, and I even learned things in the process. As I get older and read more books, I find that the books I enjoy the most teach me something, or show me a different perspective on life that I find inspiring or just different and weird. I had no idea that African Americans were fetishized so much in Paris, for example. You were in with the in crowd as long as you could amuse them, and when you were out, they were pretty ambivalent about your life or wellbeing. Well-written, easy read with interesting cultural tidbits, all wrapped up in a heady, intriguing jazz-infused bundle.