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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 03/2023
  • B0BSDL3GGS
  • 286 pages
  • $2.99
Corey Lynn Fayman
Author
Gillespie Field Groove

When nurse and fledgling pilot Lucinda Rhodes hires guitar-playing private detective Rolly Waters to track down a Stratocaster guitar owned by her deceased father, Rolly is thrilled to take on her case, especially when he learns the guitar’s original owner may have been Jimi Hendrix. But Gerry Rhodes’s reckless personal history leads to more questions than Rolly and Lucinda have bargained for when San Diego Police detective Bonnie Hammond opens an investigation into his death.

A photograph of deceased soul singer Otis Sparks leads Rolly to Roger Sledge, a predatory rock'n'roll impresario who also happens to own an impressive guitar collection, but Sledge’s recording studio at the edge of the Gillespie airfield is guarded by menacing Russian gangsters. Murky financial dealings between Sledge, his aspiring pop star wife Svetlana, and the mob’s aging boss, Dmitri Lemotov, hint at a larger conspiracy. Shortly after a mysterious figure defaces the entrance to Sledge’s studio with the mysterious letters PJL, FBI agents arrive at Rolly’s house and advise him against any further investigation.

Rolly finds an old cassette by Otis Sparks in Gerry Rhodes’s personal effects, with a recording that bears an eerie resemblance to a hit song by country music star Ruby Dean, who was once married to, and managed by, Roger Sledge. Rolly interviews Sparks's sister, Mavis Worrell, a professor of African-American studies who blames Roger Sledge for the events leading to her brother's death. She matches the description of the woman Gerry Rhodes was seen with in a bar owned by Lemotov, but Worrell denies any connection. 

Rolly arranges a meeting with the reclusive Ruby Dean, an old acquaintance who confirms his suspicions about the cassette tape, as well as rumors about Roger Sledge’s abusive behavior. As Rolly and Lucinda move closer to locating her father’s guitar, they realize the Hendrix Stratocaster has become the ultimate prize in a dangerous and elaborate shell game. Can they beat the odds and stay alive long enough to win?

Reviews
The fifth book in the Rolly Waters Mystery series, Gillespie Field Groove centers on musician-turned-private-eye Rolly Waters’ efforts to locate a storied guitar. It purportedly once belonged to Jimi Hendrix himself, and Waters has been hired to find it by Lucinda Rhodes, who believes her deceased father had intended her to inherit it. The police, meanwhile, think her father was murdered. As Waters goes about his search, he finds himself, as always, mired in more trouble than he had bargained for, involving a sleazy music producer, a Russian mobster, the FBI, a long-ago shooting, and many surprising revelations.

Right off the bat, the book settles into an easy familiarity, balancing crisply told scenes of the detective’s game with the world of music, showcasing Fayman’s expertise about the art, lives, and business of musicians—especially shady practices that deprive artists of credits and royalties. The case turns on such real-world concerns, but Fayman’s invented details (long-gone hit songs, forgotten artists, a conniving producer/manager) ring true, as do the ephemeral traces of them that Rolly turns up in the present. This insider’s perspective and exciting sense of lost cultural history is supplemented by a twisty plot full of strong, willful women challenging the male-dominated mores of the music industry.

A cursory reader may find it a little difficult to follow the plot’s many twists and turns, especially if they haven’t been paying close attention. But for those reading with care, the book is extremely rewarding: It’s full of little clues and tantalizing bits of information that keep readers guessing, and allows them the opportunity to solve the mystery alongside Waters. Lovers of a good mystery story and music will enjoy this book which is as musically educational as it is thrilling.

Takeaway: This smart, exciting mystery about a missing guitar plunges into dark truths of the music industry.

Great for fans of: Andrew Cartmel’s The Vinyl Detective series, Charlotte Carter’s Nanette Hayes series.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 03/2023
  • B0BSDL3GGS
  • 286 pages
  • $2.99
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