Meet Elvis Cole, L.A. private eye . . . he quotes Jiminy Cricket and
carries a .38. He's a literate, wisecreacking Vietnam vet who is
determined never to grow up.
The blonde who walked into Cole's office was the bestlooking woman he'd
seen in weeks. The only thing that kept her from rating a perfect "10"
was the briefcase on one arm and the uptight hotel magnate on the other.
Bradley Warren had lost something very valuable--something that belonged
to someone else: a rare thirteenth-century Japanese manuscript called
the Hagakure.
Just about all Cole knew about Japanese culture he'd learned from
reading Shogun, but he knew a lot about crooks--and what he didn't
know his sociopathic sidekick, Joe Pike, did. Together their search
begins in L.A.'s Little Tokyo and the nest of notorious Japanese mafia,
the yakuza, and leads to a white-knuckled adventure filled with madness,
murder, sexual obsession, and a stunning double-whammy ending. For Elvis
Cole, it's just another day's work.
Praise for Stalking the Angel
"Stalking the Angel is a righteous California book: intelligent,
perceptive, hard, clean."--James Ellroy
"Out on the West Coast, where private eyes thrive like avocado trees,
Robert Crais has created an interesting and amusing hero in Elvis
Cole."--The Wall Street Journal
"Devotees of the rock 'em, sock 'em school should find [Stalking the
Angel] tasty."--The San Diego Union