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Hardcover The Ragtime Fool Book

ISBN: 1590586999

ISBN13: 9781590586990

The Ragtime Fool

(Book #3 in the Ragtime Trilogy Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

It's 1951, and ragtime is making a comeback. In Sedalia, Missouri, plans are underway for a ceremony to honor Scott Joplin. Brun Campbell, the old Ragtime Kid, learns of a journal Joplin kept and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Fast action and strong characterization make this a winner

The Ragtime Fool provides a fine, satisfying mystery set in 1951 when ragtime is making a comeback in Missouri. A ceremony to celebrate Scott Joplin comes under fire when an old friend wants to suppress secrets. Fast action and strong characterization make this a winner.

Joplin Would Have Loved It

The Ragtime Fool by Larry Karp caps the author's wonderful ragtime trilogy, which traces musical innovator Scott Joplin and his legacy from Joplin's roots in Sedalia, Missouri, to his later days in New York's Harlem, and back again to Sedalia to view the aftermath of Joplin's legacy. Karp breathes suspenseful, action-packed life into all three of these crime fiction stories, and bases them on many real-world historical figures uncovered through exacting research and filled in by way of the author's deep character insights and drama-loving imagination. This final part of the saga is set in 1951 and starts in Venice, California, where Joplin's one white student, Brun Campbell, now an old man, lives and operates a barber shop. We also meet young Alan Chandler in Hobart, New Jersey, an aspiring pianist who has just discovered ragtime. The unfortunate death--perhaps murder--of Brun's friend in California; a rich young lady in New Jersey who has a crush on Alan: a Scott Joplin celebration in Sedalia; and the revelation of a journal written by Scott Joplin himself and now up for sale set off the amusing, difficult, and deadly serious events that Karp follows without hesitation giving readers a novel's worth of true enjoyment. The story is riveting in every aspect and the characters are as authentic as the people in everyone's own real lives. The mystery is fun, fascinating, and ultimately satisfying. Another notch on the author's very accomplished list of works.

super Ragtime historical tale

At one time, Brun Campbell was the sole white student of ragtime master Scott Joplin. However, that was seemingly ages ago for now in 1951, The Ragtime Kid is an old man who cuts hair in Venice, California, but continues to push Joplin's reputation hoping to get some good publicity for the ragtime great. In Joplin's hometown of Sedalia, Missouri, plans to honor him in a special ceremony have divided the area. Many are proud of what the late great ragtime guru did, but the Klan has other thoughts. When word of a Joplin journal surfaces, Brun and a seventeen years old New Jersey ally Alan Chandler are exhilarated and want it published so the profits will allow the leaders of Sedalia to create a Joplin-Ragtime museum. Historian Rudi Blesh also wants to publish the journal as a book. Others including close friends of Joplin do not want it published while the Klan wants to destroy the diary. The Klan believes killing including blowing up a filled auditorium is acceptable. The third Ragtime historical tale is a superb thriller with a seemingly cast of thousands deftly played like a maestro by Larry Karp. The multiple sub-plotted story line is fast-paced as several diverse interests converge in Sedalia. The deep look at racial relations and divisions during the end of the Truman era as well as how those who knew Joplin prefer to pick and choose their history as nostalgia wants positive memories which makes for a strong character driven mid twentieth century thriller. Harriet Klausner

A New "Entertainer:" Larry Karp's "The Ragtime Fool"

Larry Karp, with his novelist's eye for plot and character and his historian's respect for time and place, has applied these practiced skills to another superb mystery. His leading man this time is Brun Campbell, "The Ragtime Fool." We met Brun as an 1899 teenager in Karp's first novel in this trilogy,"The Ragtime Kid." HISTORY: Campbell (a real person) was a pupil of Scott Joplin (true.) In his wife's eyes, he'd always been a Fool for the vulgar music that has imprinted his life. FICTION: Now it's 1951. The Kid's an old man. He's returning half-a-century later to Ragtime's birthplace, Sedalia, Missouri, in the belief that he can ignite renewed respect for his now-forgotten idol. Trust me, the complex mystery the author constructs in that town, at that time, will keep you turning the pages well past midnight. Yes, it's about music. It's also about greed, hatred, love, and murder. Max Morath, Entertainer/writer

A Page Turner With Depth

The Ragtime Fool is the best yet in what was already a fantastic trilogy. Carefully crafted and richly peopled with both historical and fictional characters, this taut mystery explores the racial tensions of the 1950s, informing as it entertains. Once again, Larry Karp is pitch perfect in an intricate tale of music and murder.
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