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SWEET, SOFT, PLENTY RHYTHM by Laura Warrell Kirkus Star

SWEET, SOFT, PLENTY RHYTHM

by Laura Warrell

Pub Date: Sept. 20th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-31644-3
Publisher: Pantheon

An impressive debut novel weaves storylines of lost love, coming-of-age, and midlife crisis to chronicle a Boston-based jazz musician’s reckoning with the untidy spoils of his myriad affairs.

Trumpeter Cyrus Palmer—better known to family, friends, and fans as Circus—seems irresistible to just about every woman who crosses his path. The spring of 2013 finds him turning 40 and wondering whether this magnetism has been more a curse than a blessing. He has just found out, for instance, that Maggie Swan, a feisty percussionist he digs the most at the moment, is pregnant with his child. He's not overjoyed about this news as it coincides with a potentially career-transforming project; and especially because, as he tells Maggie, “I already got a kid barely talks to me.” Indeed, Koko, Circus’ moody, truculent 14-year-old daughter from a previous liaison, may well be the only female on the planet impervious to his charms. A big reason for which is that Circus, saying the least, isn’t all that good at being an attentive, empathetic dad to Koko at a time when her own emotional life is as chaotic as her dad’s. Circus’ clumsy if earnest attempts to bond with Koko seem perpetually interrupted by impromptu engagements with his loves past and present, including Pia, Koko’s tormented mother; Peach, a warmhearted neighborhood bartender; Angela, a drama professor who sees Circus as “a beautiful, beautiful failure”; and assorted others who are dazzled, confounded, exasperated, or obsessed with him. Vivid, poignant portraits of these women are interspersed with the separate struggles of both Circus and Koko to get through transitions that have little in common with each other except pain and shame. Though this is her first novel, Warrell displays delicately wrought characterization and a formidable command of physical and emotional detail. Her more intimate set pieces deliver sensual, erotic vibrations, and, most crucially for a novel that takes its title from Jelly Roll Morton, she knows how to write about the way it feels to deliver jazz—and receive it.

A captivating modern romance evoking love, loss, recovery, and redemption.