Barry has been shouldering the majority of the load
each Friday recently and does so again this week as he reviews MR. MONK AND THE DIRTY COP by Lee
Goldberg. For the complete list of all the suggestions this week make sure you
head over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
MR. MONK AND
THE DIRTY COP (2009) by Lee Goldberg
Reviewed by
Barry Ergang
Obsessive-compulsive
and phobic since childhood, Adrian Monk was a San Francisco Police Department
homicide detective with an enviable arrest record until he had a complete breakdown
after his wife was murdered. After his recovery, which took several years, his
obsessive-compulsive disorder and phobias intensified by his loss, he applied
for reinstatement into the SFPD but was turned down. His good friend Captain
Leland Stottlemeyer put him on his department’s budget as a consultant and has
used him ever since whenever a particularly difficult murder case presents
itself.
In the novel under consideration, substantial budget cuts have compelled Stottlemeyer reluctantly to eliminate Monk’s consultancy, so that he and, by extension, his assistant (and the story’s narrator) Natalie Teeger, are out of work.
In the novel under consideration, substantial budget cuts have compelled Stottlemeyer reluctantly to eliminate Monk’s consultancy, so that he and, by extension, his assistant (and the story’s narrator) Natalie Teeger, are out of work.
Somewhat
more episodic than most of its predecessors in the series, the novel has Monk
casually solving a multitude of murders throughout because he simply can’t help
not doing so and, eventually, because
he and Natalie are hired by Intertect, an elite private investigative agency
run by former cop Nicholas Slade. One of the meatiest cases he’s assigned
concerns the murders of several judges. The client is one Salvatore Lucarelli,
a big-time mobster currently in jail and awaiting trial. The novel’s other
major case, which Monk looks into independent of the agency, to Slade’s great
exasperation, concerns the killing of Paul Braddock, former SFPD detective now
working in the desert town of Banning, who is an old colleague/enemy of Captain
Stottlemeyer’s. Braddock is the titular dirty cop who has recently had both
verbal and physical altercations with Stottlemeyer. The evidence in his death
points overwhelmingly to the captain, but Monk knows Stottlemeyer is no murderer.
Out of loyalty to the man who has always been unswervingly loyal to him, he
sets out to prove it by tracking down Braddock’s actual slayer.
Author
Lee Goldberg has conveyed in this outing Monk’s idiosyncrasies to great effect,
as usual, inducing a lot of smiles
and occasional out-loud laughter. (Monk’s embrace of a device called the Diaper
Genie* that he sees as one of mankind’s salvations is in itself
worth the price of admission.) A predominant aspect of this particular entry in
the series is Natalie’s identity crisis. It’s well handled without becoming
cloying, marks a rite of passage for Monk’s oft-harried assistant, and adds
depth to her character.
Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop is easy to recommend.
*I had no idea if this item was real or fictional, so I
looked it up on-line. It’s real.
© 2015 Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winner Barry
Ergang’s written work has appeared in numerous publications, print and
electronic. Some of it is available at Amazon
and at Smashwords.
His website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/.
Good pick, but not yet forgotten. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to comment. Actually, I can think of any number of FFB titles that aren't really forgotten. E.g., today there are a couple of Agatha Christie titles on the list at Patti's blog.
ReplyDeleteOn the cover, he looks like he's trying to cast a magic spell or hypnotize someone. Ha! I have seen a few episodes but not tried any of the tie-in books.
ReplyDelete