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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars When's the movie coming out?
Having just read Hostage, Demolition Angel, and LA Requiem, I am now reading Voodoo River. I guess you could say that I like Robert Crais" writing.
The back page always refers to Mr. Crais' credentials as a screenwriter for LA Law and Hill Street Blues, both excellent TV shows from years gone by. Why hasn't any of his books been considered for full-length...
Published on Feb 18 2004

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars ELVIS KNOWN AS STUDLY??????????
This is the fifth book for me in this series. I think I liked it least of all. I am so glad I did not read the Booklist Review before I bought the book or I would not have bought it. Why they had to give the main information I do not know. Elvis is in Cajun country, Crais is at home. But, I was not pleased with a lot of pages of talk, talk and more talk with Lucy. Elvis...
Published on Nov 17 2001 by Mac Blair


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars ELVIS KNOWN AS STUDLY??????????, Nov 17 2001
By 
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the fifth book for me in this series. I think I liked it least of all. I am so glad I did not read the Booklist Review before I bought the book or I would not have bought it. Why they had to give the main information I do not know. Elvis is in Cajun country, Crais is at home. But, I was not pleased with a lot of pages of talk, talk and more talk with Lucy. Elvis does his job, see review, but thought a lot of the book just drug. The ending was good but only lasted a few pages. Would also like a lot more of Pike. He is so good. Can do without Lucy in future books but I gather she is going to be in them. If you have not read a Crais book before do not start with this one. Any of the first four are better, I think.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars mildly humorous swamp romp, Jun 27 2004
By 
Paul Skinner (Manassas, Virginia United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
Elvis gets a call to help out a TV actress discover info about her biological parents, which leads him to a small town in Louisiana. Interesting characters abound, including a giant snapping turtle. Soon, Elvis realizes another detective is on the scene, and not everything is as it first appears. The storyline also involves some romance with Elvis first meeting Lucy Chenier (who appears in subsequent Elvis stories), a lawyer from Baton Rouge. Somewhere about 2/3rd of the way into this book, the storyline changes as Elvis takes on a mission to right the wrongs of several folks in the back woods.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars When's the movie coming out?, Feb 18 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
Having just read Hostage, Demolition Angel, and LA Requiem, I am now reading Voodoo River. I guess you could say that I like Robert Crais" writing.
The back page always refers to Mr. Crais' credentials as a screenwriter for LA Law and Hill Street Blues, both excellent TV shows from years gone by. Why hasn't any of his books been considered for full-length movies? It seems to be a natural consequence, given his prior work.
I can't help but visualize each of the characters, especially, Joe Pike. I think of Jan Michael Vincent as Joe Pike, cat-like, etc.
Given the success this year of the movie version of Mystic River, I think it might be time to consider one of Crais' novels for a similar treatment. The difficulty lies in deciding which one to do first. LA Requiem was good for the action and character of Joe Pike. Might be a good one to begin with. I'll have to read the rest of the books so I can assess them all.
Later.
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3.0 out of 5 stars TWO, Two, Two plots in one., Aug 20 2003
By 
Charles J. Marr (Cambridge Springs, Pa USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
Who names these things anyway? Yes there's a river, but where's the "voodoo?" Maybe it's in Louisiana itself, but certainly not in this novel's plots. Pretty much standard detective fiction stuff. Elvis Cole - world's greatest private detective- reappears in Cajun country hunting an unknown birth mother for a T.V. star. Little rough play, chases, silent down-home folks, and a touch of blackmail and murder. Elvis meets local lawyer and etufee. Case solved. But what dark deeds have led to local crawfish magnate's probable motive for murder. Plot two crawls out of the swamp: alien smuggling and big city hoods. Worry not. Gators and snappers will not triumph. Not Crais' best, but worth carrying onto the plane for the long ride from a cold climate to a destination in the Pelican State. Just that I am a bit upset by the false flag.
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3.0 out of 5 stars passable, Jun 17 2003
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
Another decent Elvis Cole/Joe Pike story, with the heros
traveling to New Orleans and Baton Rouge to help a Hollywood
TV actress trace her roots. A lot of typical action,with a
series of memorable characters made this a very readable
book, but of only passable mystery value.
Unhappily, the author rather mixes up '50s and '60 cultural
sensibilities with modern views when he tries to explore the
emotions of these characters and how they relate to their
problems.
He too quickly overcomes the shame of racial mixing, which practice
was almost universally condemned in that earlier era, by applying present-day indifference, and his quick glossing-over
of such problems rather reduces the ability of this story to
hold the attention of attentive readers.
This is a passable read, but not one to grip most readers.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Elvis Falls in Love in Bayou Country, May 18 2003
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 112,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (#1 HALL OF FAME)   
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
If you have yet to begin the marvelous Elvis Cole series by Robert Crais, you've got a great treat ahead of you! Few series get off to a stronger start than Mr. Crais did with The Monkey's Raincoat, which won both the Anthony and Macavity awards for best novel while being nominated for the Edgar and Shamus awards as well. Stalking the Angel followed powerfully with classic noir style of the 1930s hard-boiled detective up against evil moderated with wise cracks. Lullaby Town updated the 1930s detective stories about Hollywood. Free Fall looked hard at the corruptibility of the police and found them wanting. And the books just keep getting better from there in their characterizations, action, story-telling and excitement.

Elvis Cole is the star attraction, the co-owner of The Elvis Cole Detective Agency. He's now 40ish, ex-Army, served in Vietnam, ex-security guard, has two years of college, learned to be a detective by working under George Feider, a licensed P.I. for over 40 years, does martial arts as enthusiastically as most people do lunch, and is fearless but not foolish. He's out to right the wrongs of the world as much as he is to earn a living. Elvis has a thing for Disney characters (including a Pinocchio clock), kids, cats, scared clients and rapid fire repartee. He drives a Jamaica yellow 1966 Corvette Stingray convertible, and usually carries a Dan Wesson .38 Special.

His main foil is partner, Joe Pike, an ex-Marine, ex-cop who moves quietly and mysteriously wearing shades even in the dark . . . when he's not scaring the bad guys with the red arrows tattooed on his deltoids, which are usually bare in sleeveless shirts. Although he has an office with Elvis, Pike spends all of his time at his gun shop when not routing the bad guys with martial arts while carrying and often using enough firepower to stop a tank. Pike rarely speaks . . . and never smiles. A standing gag is trying to catch Pike with a little twitch of his lips indicating he might possibly be amused. But he's there when you need him. He drives a spotless red Jeep.

Robert Parker's Spenser is the obvious character parallel for Elvis, but Spenser and Elvis are different in some ways. Cole is more solitary, usually being alone when he's not working. Cole is very much L.A. and Spenser is ultra blue collar Boston. Cole is martial arts while Spenser boxes and jogs. What they have in common is that they're both out to do the right thing, with money being unimportant. They both love to crack wise as they take on the bad guys. The bad guys hate the "humor" in both cases, and can't do much about it. The dialogue written for each is intensely rich.

Mr. Crais has a special talent for making you care about his characters, especially the clients and their kids. You'll want to know what happens to them. With a lot of experience in script writing, Mr. Crais also knows how to set the scene physically and make you feel it. He may be out finest fiction writer about physical movement. He gives you all the clues to picture what's going on . . . but draws back from giving so much detail that you can't use your own imagination to make things better.

On to Voodoo River, the fifth book in the series. The title refers the mysterious evils that can lurk amid the Louisiana bayous. Mr. Crais is from Louisiana originally, and he credibly moves the locale for this story from Los Angeles to his first home. Those who love the L.A. color to his novels will be disappointed. Those who want a little more mysterious and colorful backdrop will feel rewarded. It takes a little work to follow all of the bayou and food references in the book. I've been to Louisiana many times, and I was stretched. Keep your dictionary handy.

Television star Jodi Taylor hires Elvis to find her biological parents so she can understand her health history better. Elvis travels to Louisiana to work with an attorney, Lucy Chenier, who specializes in handling the delicate Louisiana law for arranging such contacts. He quickly uncovers the answer, and finds out that there are lots of hidden motives involved in his assignment. From there, he has to take on some truly imposing villains to right the wrongs that began many years before. In the process, Elvis falls deeply in love with Lucy. Now, he has something to lose when he faces the bad guys . . . and it makes him both more vulnerable and appealing as a character.

It was only a matter of time before Elvis climbed down off of his pedestal and became a regular, vulnerable human being. Voodoo River marks the first of several novels that develop around his relationship with Lucy and her son, Ben. Those who like a love interest in their detective novels will see this as a major plus. Those who do not will like the series much less well from here.

Pay particular attention to the evolution of the characters of Elvis Cole and Jodi Taylor. Mr. Crais stresses both to their core, and they come out changed by the experience.

The book's story-telling style differs from the earlier books in the series. Voodoo River reads like a series of novellas strung together like jewels on a necklace by a common theme. Since I liked all but the last novella quite a bit, this structure made the book more appealing. It was like getting five stories for the price of one.

After you finish the book, I suggest that you think about what your values are. To defeat a great evil, which of your values could you feel compelled to abandon?

Donald Mitchell
Co-author of The 2,000 Percent Solution, The Irresistible Growth Enterprise and The Ultimate Competitive Advantage

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4.0 out of 5 stars Voodoo River, Aug 21 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
Missing-persons specialist Elvis Cole (Free Fall, 1993, etc.) thinks his fifth case is right up his alley: locate the blood family of white-hot TV actress Jodi Taylor, adoptive and concerned about her long-term medical history. So Elvis plunges into the Louisiana bayous, racing against another local shamus, and soon finds not only the bashful parents, but a secret about Jodi that nobody told him when he was first hired. So far, so good: the first half of this tale is so cunningly tailored to Elvis's strengths--the cocky confidence, the droll humor, the aw- shucks authority--that reading it is like scrunching into a comfy featherbed. But just as it seems the case is winding down, Elvis stumbles onto an elaborate plot to smuggle illegals into the country. Jodi, who's been promised confidentiality, has a hard time dealing with this development, and no wonder: Except for some shared characters, this second plot has nothing to do with what she thought was her book. It's a lot less tricky and inventive, too, though a lot more violent. Half a masterpiece is better than none, but you've gotta feel for poor Jodi, abandoned still again just when she thought she finally had it made.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Another Solid Elvis, May 15 2002
By 
Richard A. Mitchell "Rick Mitchell" (candia, new hampshire United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
To know Elvis Cole is to enjoy him. Once again, Craig brings his excellent dialogue, intriguing plot lines and sense of humor to life. Crais writes as well as anyone in this genre. Additionally, each time he takes on different topics in which to set his mysteries. In Voodoo River Elvis takes his "world's greatest detective" agency to Louisiana and enters the worlds of adopted children growing to middle age and immigration. Despite the change in locale away from LA, Mr. Crais does not a miss a beat. If you are an Elvis fan this is everything you have come to expect. If you have not yet met him, you will enjoy him and look forward to finding another Elvis book. Crais' writing style enhances the telling of terrific story lines.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Don't start with this book, April 3 2002
By 
Gretchen (Spring Lake, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
I agree with the other reviews, if this is your first encounter with Elvis Cole DO NOT start with this book! It does not give the background info usually found in the series. I am notorious for read series book out of order but for some reason I managed to read this one starting with book one. Please don't judge the others by the way this one read.

I did enjoy this book but I felt there was too much going, blackmail, lost mothers, illegal aliens, romance....some things did wrap up a little to nicely in the end but it was a good read.

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3.0 out of 5 stars not as good as some of his others, Feb 26 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Voodoo River (Mass Market Paperback)
This book was enjoyable, but wasn't as good as some of his other books. I recently read Demolition Angel by the same author, and thought it was better.
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Voodoo River
Voodoo River by Robert Crais (Mass Market Paperback - April 1 1996)
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