The Axeman's Jazz

by Julie Smith

Skip Langdon (2)

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On the trail of Axeman, a 1990s reincarnation of New Orleans' notorious serial killer of the 1920s, detective Skip Langdon goes undercover in the city's hundreds of self-help groups to find the killer.

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5 reviews
When it appears that a serial killer is loose in New Orleans, homicide cop Skip Langdon is assigned to the investigative team. The killer claims to be the Axeman, a legendary New Orleans serial killer from seventy years earlier. The few leads in the case converge in the city's twelve step groups. Skip goes undercover in the groups to see if she can flush out the killer.

The book doesn't work well as a police procedural. Skip doesn't act like a police officer. She seems more like a private detective or even an amateur, and her personality is more like that of a cozy sleuth. However, many cozy readers would be put off by the profanity and graphic sexual language. Most of the twelve step group scenes were enjoyable enough that I stuck with show more it, but I doubt that I'll ever read another book in this series. show less
½
Who needs Mardi Gras. New Orleans has plenty of reasons to celebrate, and when a serial killer sends a letter to the press indicating that he is ready to kill again, but will pass over any home hosting a jazz band, the city responds with parties city-wide. The police are concerned as they have already started looking for the killer after two people with almost no human connections are strangled and a large red "A" is left on the wall. The connection seems to be 12-step meetings, and the police, notably new homicide detective Skip Langford, start attending meetings, learning more than any of them wanted to know about themselves and other friends and family members who "enjoy" the anonymity that such meetings offer. Definitely a page show more turner, and one I highly recommend. Fortunately, there are a series of Skip Langford books, and the detective even appears in the Talba Wallis series. You go girl! show less
The Axeman’s Jazz: a Skip Langdon Mystery. Julie Smith. 1991. This series is interesting because it is set in New Orleans: “New Orleans could wreck your liver and poison your blood. It could destroy you financially. It could shun you or embrace you, teach you tricks of the heart you thought Tennessee Williams was just kidding about.” The writer includes interesting observations about southerners. In explaining her family’s objection to her chosen career, Skip states, “You did what you did because things had always been done that way and because someone else wanted you to. Not because there was any point in hell to it.” Skip is assigned to investigate a quirky murder in the Quarter and then a second body turns up. The only show more link between the two is that they both attended self-help twelve step support groups. Skip and several other police personnel are assigned to go to these meetings where they meet an assortment of interesting possible suspects and eventually identify the murderer. Smith won an Edgar for the first book in this series. show less
Welcome to the world of self-help groups: AA, OA, CODA, Al-Anon, etc. Well, also Southern behaviour, couched as "niceties, heat and humidity, and the weirdness that is New Orleans.

3½* were that possible.
a serial killer in New Orleans turns out to be a victim of family dynamics
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69+ Works 5,995 Members
Mystery author Julie Smith was born in Savannah, Georgia in 1944. She graduated from the University of Mississippi with a degree in journalism. After graduation, she moved to New Orleans and wrote features for the New Orleans Times-Picayune. After a year, she moved to San Francisco and got a job at the San Francisco Chronicle. Fourteen years show more later, she left to form a freelance writing firm called Invisible Ink with two other women. In 1982, her first novel, Death Turns a Trick, was published. Since becoming a full-time author, she has written over twenty novels including the ones in the Rebecca Schwartz Mystery series, the Paul McDonald Mystery series, the Skip Langdon Mystery series, and the Talba Wallis series. Her novel, New Orleans Mourning, won the 1991 Edgar Allen Poe Award for best novel. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Julie Smith is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Axeman's Jazz
Original title
The Axeman's Jazz
Original publication date
1991
People/Characters
Skip Langdon; Dr. Cindy Lou Wootten; Jimmy Dee Scoggins; Missy McClellan; Sonny Gerard; Steve Steinman
Important places
Louisiana, USA; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Dedication
For Vicky Bijur and Charlotte Sheedy

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3569 .M537553 .A96Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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Statistics

Members
397
Popularity
78,035
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.49)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
6