Ardella Garland is my mystery pen name.
Georgia Barnett's live broadcast during an outdoor charity event isn't the only thing making news. Her report is
interrupted by a grim discovery: floating in Lake Michigan is the body of Fab Weaver, head of Hit Time Records,
one of the most renowned and cutthroat companies on Chicago's Record Row. When suspicion falls on Jimmy
Flamingo, a close family friend and down-on-his-luck blues guitarist, Georgia and her twin sister Peaches,
nightclub owner and blues singer extraordinaire, quickly get on the case.
While hunting for evidence that will clear Jimmy, Georgia, Peaches, and Georgia's handsome love interest,
Detective Doug Eckart, uncover a history of incredible artistry and devastating exploitation in the Chicago music
business. Their investigation transports them into a bygone era, when Chicago was the hub of the
African-American music scene and Record Row was even more prominent than Motown, giving the world such
legends as Etta James and Curtis Mayfield. But while their songs ruled the airwaves and sold millions, many R&B
artists of that era -- including Flamingo -- never made millions. As Georgia continues her search for the truth,
the legacy of this inequity becomes shockingly apparent.
Clever, fast-paced, and endlessly absorbing, HIT TIME is a roller-coaster ride of a mystery and an eye-opening
look at a controversial slice of America's musical past.
Reviews to come.