Los Angeles, 3:58 a.m.: Elvis Cole receives the phone call he's been waiting for since childhood. Responding to a gunshot, the LAPD has found an injured man in an alleyway. He has told the officer on the scene that he is looking for his son, Elvis Cole. Minutes later, the man is dead.
Haunted throughout his life by a lack of knowledge about his father, Elvis turns to the one person who can help him navigate the minefield of his past - his longtime partner and confidant, Joe Pike. Together with hard-edged LAPD detective, Carol Starkey, they launch a feverish search for the dead man's identity - even as Elvis struggles between wanting to believe he's found his father at last, and allowing his suspicions to hold him back. With each long-buried clue they unearth, a frightening picture begins to emerge about who the dead man might have been, and the terrible secret he's been guarding.
At the same time, Elvis has no way of knowing he has awakened a sleeping monster. The further he goes in his investigation, the closer he draws to a merciless killer who is violently connected to the unidentified man's past. This psychopath believes Cole is hunting him, and he goes on the attack to find Elvis before Elvis can find him.
The plots of some novels almost defy logic. Such is the case with Crais's latest Elvis Cole mystery, in which the investigator receives a call telling him that a man found in an alley, who claimed to be Cole's long lost (and heretofore unknown) father, has just died. Cole then begins his search for the truth about the man--and finds himself enmeshed with a crazed killer. James Daniels takes the story and runs, using a style that is low-key yet that also retains Cole's urgent desire to learn if the man really is his father. Daniels avoids the trap of injecting too much emotion into his performance, allowing the story to unfold at a good pace--and without adding the cynicism the plot warrants. D.J.S. (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine
About the Author
Robert Crais is the 2006 recipient of the Ross Macdonald Literary Award. He is the author of numerous New York Times bestsellers, including The Two Minute Rule, The Forgotten Man, and L.A. Requiem.
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