Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7)

Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7)
Indigo Slam - Elvis Cole, Bk 7
Author: Robert Crais
ISBN-13: 9780345435644
ISBN-10: 0345435648
Publication Date: 2/4/2003
Pages: 307
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 162

4 stars, based on 162 ratings
Publisher: Fawcett
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

12 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

spOOnman avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 51 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A can't put down
gigi avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 355 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really love Elvis Cole! He's the "world's greatest detective" and always gets his man. Indigo slam revolves around a counterfeiter and his 3 children running from ruthless Russian mobsters and some very upset Feds!! It's up to Elvis to save the man and his children from both, while not breaking the law himself.
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Easy read, Elvis Cole at his best, kept me guessing and a great ending
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 25 more book reviews
Awesome Elvis Cole mystery. Quickly overtaking Robert Parker's Spencer for personality.
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 8 more book reviews
His 7th Elvis Cole is one of the best of the series.
Cliiffs avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 26 more book reviews
I like the Elvis Cole novels.
KansasSunflower avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 329 more book reviews
Elvis Cole is a really fun hero. I really enjoy all of these books.
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 39 more book reviews
Life in the CA sun suits Elvis Cole -- until the day a fifteen-year-old girl and her two siblings walk into his office...to pick up the pieces of a drama... tale of high crimes and illicit drugs.
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 4 more book reviews
Love all of Robert Crais's books!
Barbllm avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 241 more book reviews
Originally published in 1997, Indigo Slam is one of the better Elvis Cole novels. The self-proclaimed worlds greatest detective (dont tell Bruce Wayne!) is hired by three children, the oldest being 15, to find their father, a job that Cole thinks will be very simple. However, as it turns out, the father is a skilled counterfeiter on the run from the Russian mafia. Cole is as wisecracking as ever; the scenes where Joe Pike, a taciturn former soldier, is sent to babysit the three kids are amusing.

There are multiple subplots: Pike is hoping to have his girlfriend Lucy move to LA with him, but her ex complicates things; some Vietnamese expatriates also are searching for the kids father; corrupt federal agents want to know where he is since another agent was killed trying to get the family into the Witness Protection Program. The US Treasury would also like it if he stopped counterfeiting money.

The climax is held at the happiest place on earth, Disneyland, which alone guarantees that Disney will never buy the film rights. I love Crais Cole and Pike novels. The characters are realistic, especially the kids: the 15 year old who is the familys de facto mother; the 9 year old who acts out after his father disappears; the federal agents who want the father without the LAPD interfering, and the LAPD who dont like Coles investigation.

A good mystery does not need to involve serial killers or graphic violence, and Crais proves this in every Elvis Cole novel he writes. He has a good detective-noir style thats reminiscent of Mickey Spillane or Dashiell Hammett.
reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 7 more book reviews
all the books in this series are entertaining, some more than others
debs avatar reviewed Indigo Slam (Elvis Cole, Bk 7) on + 649 more book reviews
Grabbed me from page one and was a really good read. Got a little tedious at times when getting into the international issues with Russians, Viets, etc. but those paragraphs were easy to skim over and not lose the story.