A city alive with jazz. A killer hiding in the shadows. A mystery that refuses to die.
Between 1918 and 1919, New Orleans was gripped by a wave of brutal attacks that left families shattered, neighborhoods paralyzed by fear, and investigators scrambling for answers. The unknown assailant, later called the Axeman, slipped silently into homes in the dead of night, leaving behind devastation and questions that still echo more than a century later.
The Music of Murder takes readers deep into Jazz Age New Orleans, where music, culture, and violence collided in ways no one could have imagined. Drawing from archival newspapers, police reports, eyewitness accounts, and historical records, this meticulously researched true crime investigation reconstructs the timeline of the Axeman's reign with clarity, depth, and narrative intensity.
Readers will walk the streets of early twentieth century New Orleans alongside investigators, victims, and witnesses. They will follow the mounting panic as the attacks continued, examine the evidence left behind, and explore the theories that emerged as authorities struggled to identify a suspect. The Axeman's crimes did more than claim lives. They reshaped an entire city and left behind a legacy of fear, rumor, and unanswered questions.
This historical true crime narrative examines the victims, the investigation, and the social climate of the time, offering insight into how communities respond when safety and certainty disappear. It separates documented fact from speculation while preserving the emotional reality of those who lived through the terror.
Perfect for readers who enjoy historical true crime, unsolved murder mysteries, and investigative nonfiction based on real events, this book provides a compelling and immersive look at one of America's most infamous cold cases. The story remains unresolved, the identity of the Axeman unknown, and the mystery continues to captivate new generations of readers and investigators.
The music never stopped. The fear never faded. The mystery still waits for answers.
Eliza Hawthorne is a historian and true crime author with a passion for unearthing the forgotten mysteries of the past. Specializing in unsolved cases from the early 20th century, her meticulously researched books transport readers into the smoky jazz clubs, shadowy streets, and courtroom dramas of a bygone era. With a background in historical research and storytelling, Hawthorne brings chilling real-life crimes to life, blending fact and atmosphere in gripping narratives that read like a detective's case file.When she's not buried in old newspapers, court records, and dusty archives, Eliza can be found exploring historic crime scenes, chasing long-lost leads, and piecing together the puzzles time tried to erase. Her Shadows of the Past series gives voice to victims whose stories were nearly forgotten and examines the dark legends that continue to haunt entire cities.