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  • The Monkey's Raincoat

The Monkey's Raincoat

Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #1 / 21
by Robert Crais
The Monkey's Raincoat (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #1) by Robert Crais
★ 8.50 / 2
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When Ellen Lang's husband disappears with their son, she hires Elvis Cole to track him down. A quiet and seemingly submissive wife, Ellen can't even write a check without him. All she wants is to get him and her son back—no questions asked.

The search for Ellen's errant husband leads Elvis into the seamier side of Hollywood. He soon learns that Mort Lang is a down-on-his-luck talent agent who associates with a schlocky movie producer, and the last place he was spotted was at a party thrown by a famous and very well-connected ex-Matador. But no one has seen him since—including his B-movie girlfriend.

At the same time the police find Mort in his parked car with four gunshots in his chest —and no kid in sight—Ellen disappears. Now nothing is what it seems, and the heat is on. It's up to Elvis Cole and his partner Joe Pike to find the connection between sleazy Hollywood players and an ex-Matador.

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ThrillerMysteryCrime FictionSuspense Thriller
Release date: 1987

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Robert Crais

Robert Crais

In the sun-scorched sprawl of Los Angeles, where crime and conscience often collide, Robert Crais has spent decades navigating the fine line between justice and vengeance. Known for his sharp, emotionally layered crime novels, Crais is the creator of the enduring Elvis Cole and Joe Pike series—stories that aren’t just page-turners, but character studies in loyalty, trauma, and survival. What makes his work resonate isn’t just the pulse-pounding suspense, but the aching humanity behind every gunshot and gut punch.

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Before novels, there were scripts. Born and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Crais grew up on a steady diet of classic detective fiction and action-packed television. Drawn west by a love for storytelling and the mystique of L.A., he landed in Hollywood and made his mark as a screenwriter for iconic series like Hill Street Blues, Cagney & Lacey, and Miami Vice. But even in the glitz of network television, he felt something was missing—depth, freedom, and the ability to follow characters into the dark and let them find their own light.

That break came with The Monkey’s Raincoat, a novel that introduced readers to Elvis Cole, a private investigator who quotes Disney characters even as he stares down violent criminals. The book won the Macavity and Anthony Awards and marked the beginning of a series that would grow more complex with each installment. Alongside Cole is Joe Pike—stoic, deadly, and fiercely loyal. Together, they’re not just solving crimes; they’re wrestling with moral ambiguity, haunted pasts, and what it really means to protect someone.

Crais’s novels—whether it’s the emotionally charged Suspect, the explosive Hostage (later adapted into a film starring Bruce Willis), or the quieter, more introspective entries in the Cole/Pike series—share a signature style: taut prose, cinematic pacing, and an unflinching look at how violence shapes lives. His background in television taught him how to build suspense; his heart as a novelist taught him to stay with the aftermath.

He’s been a finalist for the Edgar Award, honored with the Ross Macdonald Literary Award, and named a Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America—one of the highest honors in the genre. But what matters most to Crais, it seems, isn’t the accolades. It’s the readers who return, book after book, to see what happens when loyalty is tested, justice is personal, and heroes carry both guns and ghosts.

With each novel, Robert Crais deepens the legacy of American crime fiction—not by reinventing the wheel, but by digging into the emotional truth of every turn. He doesn’t just tell stories about crime; he tells stories about people. And in the world he’s built, that’s the most dangerous—and compelling—story of all.

Elvis Cole and Joe Pike

Los Angeles isn’t just a setting in the Elvis Cole and Joe Pike novels—it’s a character in its own right: sun-washed and fractured, glamorous on the surface, broken underneath. Through this electric and dangerous landscape walk two men: a private investigator with a sarcastic streak and a stubborn sense of honor, and his partner, a taciturn ex-Marine who speaks with action more than words. Together, they don’t just solve crimes—they unravel the lives wrecked by them.

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What sets this series apart isn’t just the tight plotting or high-stakes investigations. It’s the humanity running just beneath the tension. Each story peels back layers—of a mystery, a client, a city, and the men chasing justice in it. Elvis Cole is more than a wisecracking detective; he’s someone who feels the weight of the stories he steps into. And Joe Pike, with his silence and precision, balances that with an unshakable moral code. Their loyalty, both to each other and to doing what’s right (even when it’s messy), gives the series a pulse that goes beyond the genre’s conventions.

These thrillers are sharp, often brutal, yet surprisingly intimate. The emotional undercurrents sneak up on you, especially as past wounds—both personal and professional—bubble to the surface across the books. Themes of redemption, loyalty, and justice course through each installment, whether they're tracking a missing person in The Monkey’s Raincoat or diving into murky secrets in The Big Empty.

For readers drawn to crime fiction that fuses atmospheric storytelling with characters who evolve as much as the cases they tackle, this series delivers. It doesn’t just ask whodunit—it asks why it matters. And it leaves you thinking about the answer long after the last page.


Elvis Cole and Joe Pike consists of twenty books and series is set to expand with the upcoming release of one more book. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.

The Monkey's Raincoat (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #1)
★ 8.50 / 2
Stalking the Angel (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #2)
★ 8.00 / 2
Lullaby Town (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #3)
★ 8.00 / 2
Free Fall (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #4)
★ 8.00 / 2
Voodoo River (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #5)
★ 8.00 / 2
Sunset Express (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #6)
★ 8.00 / 2
Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #7)
★ 8.00 / 2
L. A. Requiem (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #8)
★ 8.00 / 2
The Last Detective (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #9)
★ 8.00 / 2
The Forgotten Man (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #10)
★ 8.00 / 2
The Watchman (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #11)
★ 7.50 / 2
Chasing Darkness (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #12)
★ 8.00 / 2
The First Rule (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #13)
★ 7.50 / 2
The Sentry (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #14)
★ 7.50 / 2
Taken (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #15)
★ 7.50 / 2
The Promise (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #16)
★ 7.50 / 2
The Wanted (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #17)
★ 7.50 / 2
A Dangerous Man (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #18)
★ 7.50 / 2
Racing the Light (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #19)
★ 7.50 / 2
The Big Empty (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #20)
★ 7.50 / 2
Elvis Cole and Joe Pike Book 21 (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike #21)
⧗ 9.58 / 14


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