Reviewed By John Firehammer
Those who count themselves mystery buffs as well as jazz fans will find double
pleasure in "Bird Lives!," the latest outing of author Bill Moody's jazz pianist/reluctant
sleuth, Evan Horne.
Horne lives in a noirish but contemporary Los Angeles. The fiction of Horne's
life is colored with touches of reality. He plays at a real club, the Jazz Bakery,
and drops real names: Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Shelley Manne, Phil Woods, etc.
A drummer who attended Berklee and played behind Junior Mance and Jimmy Rushing,
Moody knows intimately what he's writing about. Those who love jazz will enjoy seeing
how he weaves these references into his fiction.
While the jazz part of Horne's life is quite believable and realistic, the sleuthing
part is harder to believe. The plot of "Bird Lives!" centers on the serial killings
of some Kenny G-like smooth jazz musicians. The deaths coincide with the anniversaries
of significant events in classic jazz, i.e. the death of Charles Mingus, Miles Davis'
"Birth of the Cool" recordings, etc. I immediately suspected Wynton Marsalis.
Anyway, it's pretty silly stuff, but sort of fun. Probably even more fun if you love
mysteries, which admittedly aren't my thing. The earlier Horne books have earned
excellent reviews in The New York Times Book Review and other publications, so it's
a good bet that jazz fans who take their Tony Hillerman with a dash of Bill Evans
will enjoy them.