

When The Monkey's Raincoat opens, Cole is seated in his office. In between glances at the Pinocchio clock on the wall, he stares across his desk at two women. Janet Simon insists her friend Ellen Lang hire Cole to find her husband Mort. After threatening to leave Ellen for more than a year, Mort, a Hollywood agent, disappeared with their 9-year-old son Perry after picking the boy up at school. It doesn't appear as if Mort planned to leave, because he didn't pack a bag and he has some sort of film project cooking with an old buddy, Hollywood producer Garrett Rice. Ellen is so dependent on Mort that she doesn't even know how to make out a check to pay Cole to find her missing husband and son. She does know, however, that Mort has an actress girlfriend, so armed with the girlfriend's name and some pictures, Cole goes to work on a case that's full of surprises for everybody involved in the investigation.
Cole is a likable protagonist. He's a harder-boiled Archie Goodwin, a more sensitive Harry Bosch, and Patrick Kenzie with a better sense of humor. Cole fought in Vietnam when he was 18 years old and received a chest full of medals. After that experience he decides that growing up any more isn't for him so he obtains a private detective's license and hunkers down in a small cliff-hanging house in Los Angeles with a tough cat, a music collection and books he reads multiple times. (One of the pleasures of this book is seeing the titles on his shelves.) While Cole was working to become a licensed private eye, he met a "splendid but unsuccessful" cop named Joe Pike, who also fought in Vietnam. Pike is now Cole's business partner, but his private room in their office has no furniture. Pike can be found down at the gun shop, scraping bad guys off the bottoms of his shoes and oiling his guns. When Pike gets bored, he's off to troubled countries to work as a mercenary. He's a man of few words, but great loyalty to his friends and Cole is his best friend.
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Face Like a Frying Pan |
Great characters, location, prose and plotting. Maybe this book is a little slice of heaven after all. The Monkey's Raincoat is the first book in the Elvis Cole/Joe Pike series and I'll definitely be reading more Crais.
If you haven't received your fill of a man named Elvis, take a look at the video below. I'm going to join Elvis Presley singing "Suspicious Minds." At the video's midpoint Elvis begins playing air drums and I'm going to do that, too. It's no wonder Elvis looks so good in this video. After six minutes of singing, drumming and squatting, my thighs and butt told me it was time to collapse with a book and a glass of orange juice.
For tonight I have Kinky Friedman's Elvis, Jesus and Coca-Cola lined up. It sounds irreverent to say the least. It features a sleuth named Kinky Friedman. I read some reviews of the book elsewhere and one said "This book has a place of honor on my toilet." Another said, "... if you are looking for something to kill a few hours, you could do worse." I don't want you to get the wrong impression because Friedman's books are fun and I think this one sounds fabulous. Friedman can be relied on for some unexpected situations, original lines and laugh-out-loud moments, and that's a gift straight from heaven to a reader. And next week I'll take you to some other places in reading Paradise.