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    Twelve Bar Blues by Patrick Neate

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: March 2004
    • 400pp
    • Sales Rank: 647,513
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: March 2004
      • Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
      • Format: Paperback, 400pp
      • Sales Rank: 647,513

      Synopsis

      The raucous novel that won the prestigious Whitbread Novel Award, Twelve Bar Blues is a virtuoso epic tale of fate and family, jazz and juju that spans three continents and two centuries to tell a story of enduring roots and indelible love. At its heart is Lick Holden, a talented but tormented young musician who sets the jazz scene of early-twentieth-century New Orleans on fire with the passionate tones of his coronet. But Lick's true passion is for his beautiful lost stepsister Sylvie, for whom he searches for among the streets, music halls, and bordellos of the South. Their story reverberates through the decades into the life of Sylvia Di Napoli, a black English former prostitute turned singer who travels from London to New York and Chicago in 1999 in search of the answer to the mystery of her family's roots. Funny and poignant, Twelve Bar Blues is a dynamic novel with all the emotional energy and breakneck tempo of a red-hot Big Easy jazz band that will hook you — like a favorite tune — until the very last page.

      Publishers Weekly

      Neate's novel (winner of the Whitbread) poses the question: Can an English writer pen the great American jazz novel? In the 18th-century African kingdom of Zimindo, a Zimindian named Zike is abducted by complicated magical/erotic means and eventually ends up on the slave market in New Orleans. There Zike disappears from history. A descendant, however, blows his way, if not into history, at least into legend. Fortis "Lick" Holden from Mount Marter, La., is a cornet player of the same generation as Louis Armstrong. Lick learns his licks in reform school. His mentor, Professor Hoop, keys him into the secret of the whole musician, which entails using all four parts of the body. Lick progresses from his chops to his head to his heart, but he doesn't get the fourth part down the groin until he meets back up with his adopted sister, Sylvie, who is pale enough to pass for white. After Lick returns from New Orleans to his native town, he discovers Sylvie living as the quadroon mistress of a white plantation owner. Lick's affair with her spells disaster in the racially charged atmosphere of the South, but Sylvie escapes to New York City, passes for white and marries an Italian man. Her skin color skips a generation, but expresses itself luxuriously in her granddaughter, Sylvia Di Napoli, who thereby arouses the wrath of her racist father. The novel waltzes between Lick's woes and Sylvie's genealogical quest, with a subplot involving the return to Africa of another of Zike's descendants, Coretta Pink, aka "Olurunbunmi Durowoju." Neate's story is shot through with salient observations about jazz culture, although in the end it doesn't grab the brass ring: the great American jazz novel is yet to be written. Agent, Jim Rutman, Sterling Lord Literistic. (Oct.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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      Twelve Bar Bluesby Anonymous

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      September 01, 2003: THis book takes you on a quest to find the heritage of a family and its intimate connection with music, sex and magic. It takes some intesting turns and brings in some very encryptic characters such as Musa, the zakulu, a witch doctor of Zimindo, Sylvia, a prostitiute (retired) and singer (unemployed) and even the scrawny british kid, Jim. It is an execellent book and shows you the pure essence of Jazz and its roots in a scintillating tale of love, affairs, music and emotion that can only be described as inspiration for the music which imbues with it a culture of lust, desire, and thirst for something that they could never obtain....freedom.