White Jazz

White Jazz
First edition cover
AuthorJames Ellroy
Cover artistJacket design by Chip Kidd
Front–of–jacket photograph by Robert Morrow
LanguageEnglish
SeriesL.A. Quartet
GenreCrime fiction, noir, historical fiction
PublisherAlfred A. Knopf
Publication date
September 1, 1992
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover & paperback), audio cassette, and audio download
Pages349 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN0-679-41449-5 (first edition, hardcover)
Preceded byL.A. Confidential 

White Jazz is a 1992 crime fiction novel by James Ellroy. It is the fourth in his L.A. Quartet, preceded by The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, and L.A. Confidential. James Ellroy dedicated White Jazz "TO Helen Knode." The epigraph for White Jazz is "'In the end I possess my birthplace and I am possessed by its language.' -Ross MacDonald."

Lieutenant David Klein is a veteran policeman who moonlights as a hitman for organized crime. When he is assigned to investigate a robbery at the home of the Los Angeles Police Department's (LAPD) sanctioned heroin dealer, he uncovers a plot to bring the city's crime syndicates into collusion with the channels of justice.

The stories of many characters that appeared in earlier L.A. Quartet novels, including Edmund Exley and Dudley Smith, have their ends tied up in White Jazz, which also introduces Pete Bondurant, one of the central characters in Ellroy's Underworld USA Trilogy.