THE WANTED by Robert Crais
Private eye Elvis Cole is hired by a woman to find out where her teenage son got a forty grand Rolex, and soon finds himself racing a couple of sociopathic hitmen.
It’s a fast, mostly tense read, very enjoyable, and nice to be reacquainted with Cole and Joe Pike. In fact Pike doesnt appear until a third of the way in, and I had been beginning to think he wasn’t going to feature.
You can really tell that Crais, unlike, say, Michael Connelly, who turned to fiction from being a crime reporter, started as a TV staff writer, because you’ll get a line of dialogue from a character, then a line of description or action taken by that person in a new one line paragraph, then aother line from the same person in a new paragraph…. Because that’s the way scripts are laid out. Never really noticed that before in his books, but it’s there.
This does kind of lead to a higher page count with a lower word count, and the pacing stumbles a bit in the last quarter as we suddenly get a couple of padded but entertaining in and of themselves Tarantinoesque flashbacks to flesh out the hitmen, which really halt the dive towards the climax to do something that should have been done earlier. Speaking of the hitmen, they seem to be coded as vaguely queer, echoing Wint and Kidd in Diamonds Are Forever, but at least one of them also hints at an interest in underage girls, making me wonder if Crais is trying to conflate queerness with paedophilia…. Or whether he just couldn’t quite decide which way they should swing but wanted them to seem sufficiently evil, as if the tortures and murders didn’t tell us that. Hm.
Anyway, for the most part, thrills, tension, two good leads, and proper MacGuffin handled just the way they traditionally should be. But that disappointing niggling coding too.