A young but already hard-bitten advice columnist seeks to claw her way up the ladder by investigating a brazen kidnapping that’s struck uncomfortably close to her in 1925 Harlem.
Rookie Photoplay columnist Ginny Dugan and her friend, Photoplay secretary Mary Gliszinszky, have gone to the Eighty-Three club in hope of catching a performance by elusive singer Josephine Hurston. The rumor they’ve heard is accurate: Josephine’s performing with her sweetheart, Billy Calloway, and his Rippling Rhythm band. But nobody warned them that the singer would be snatched from the club under the eyes of Ginny, who’s put in a dangerous spot. Her editor doesn’t see Ginny’s story as a stepping stone to a more prestigious writing position. The only people who take her seriously are the kidnappers, who nearly manage to dispose of her at an early stage. As Mary angles for an audition with the Ziegfeld Follies, the dream of every aspiring New York dancer, Ginny resolves to track down the criminals and present the whole story on her own terms. Although her precocious criminal record indicates her willingness to break taboos, she’ll cross several more bright lines during her quest, from sampling the “pep powder” that’s widely available to juggling the relationships that suddenly pop up with both private detective Jack Crawford, who’s bent on tracking down the cause for seven sudden deaths during recent performances of Rippling Rhythm, and investment banker Charlie Darby, who’s engaged to Ziegfeld dancer Dottie Dugan, Ginny’s sister, housemate, and financial supporter. Lyuzna lays on the period detail and springs surprises just where you don’t expect them.
A colorful period debut that’s clearly laying the groundwork for a series.