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What
if there were a white woman at the time of
Elvis's first breakthrough
with a black voice
and style, a Janis Joplin 10 years earlier, in
the racially
divided South? What if she hooked up with an old black
bluesman and a rich, young white sax player in a magical roadhouse
outside of Memphis, there to record an incendiary 45 record that,
though many remember hearing, no one seems to have ever owned? What
if murder, duplicity, love, and redemption follow the trail of the
lost 45?
Pink Cadillac opens in the present, with Colin Stone, the British
owner of a blues and early rock reissue label, deciding to
pursue one of the
holy grails of that music: The long rumored lost 45, Pink Cadillac,
sung by Daisy Holiday. Stone has recently endured a personal
tragedy, and
his search for Pink Cadillac offers him a way to get his life going
again.
In the real story it's 1955, and Daisy Holiday is on her way to
Memphis to make it as a singer. She comes across a Cadillac,
a gaudy pink one,
broken-down by the side of the road. It's driven by the up-and-coming
teen sensation Elvis Presley, and Daisy quickly gets it going. As
a reward Elvis takes her to a roadhouse outside of Memphis
presided over
by the
older black bluesman Bearcat Jackson. Elvis tells her he learned
everything he knows right at this roadhouse, and surely Bearcat
can help her.
It's clear, though, that the club has fallen on hard times. Before
he can
help, Elvis gets a call to high-tail it to New York, but when he
goes he gives Daisy the keys to his pink Cadillac.
At the roadhouse is Dell Dellaplane, the son of a rich real estate
man. Dell has dropped out of college to play his sax with Bearcat's
band.
Also there is Sonesta Clarke, an older black singer who had a semihit
on the Bearcat label that was promptly covered by a white singer
who turned it into a nationwide hit. Sonesta never had another
charting record and now has turned to religion. Bearcat's frustration
at times
boils
over into abuse of Sonesta.
It's Dell's idea to kick the roadhouse into the new "rocky-rolly
age." When he and Bearcat discover Daisy has a magical voice,
Dell writes the song Pink Cadillac for her, and they record it
on an old record
cutter.
The novel follows the fortunes of this crew as they try to sell
their record and save the roadhouse. Along the way there are
threats from
Dell's father, betrayals, moments of great success and profound
failure, and
finally the tragic murder of Bearcat Jackson.
The search for the "lost 45" becomes a search for a greater
truth: Who killed Bearcat and why? What happened to the record
that could have changed rock n' roll history? And how were the lives
of everyone
associated with this magical record, Pink Cadillac, irremediably
transformed forever?
The answers to these questions are both surprising and deeply
satisfying.
CLICK HERE to
find out about the author of and Pink
Cadillac, Robert Dunn.
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