The Wanted
Robert Crais G.P. Putnam’s Sons
Devon Connor is beside herself with worry. Her teenage son, Tyson, keeps showing up with things that neither of them could possibly afford: New clothes from Barney’s. High-end electronics. What appears to be a genuine Rolex. And his explanations are ludicrous.
Fearing he might be dealing drugs, she hires private detective Elvis Cole to look into it. It doesn’t take Cole long to discover the situation is much worse. Tyson is part of a three-person teenage gang that’s been breaking in to homes around Los Angeles.
So begins The Wanted, the latest in Robert Crais’s series of cleverly plotted, stylishly written privateeye novels featuring Cole and his fearsome, taciturn partner Joe Pike.
When Tyson and his friends go on the run, Cole races against time. The police are seeking the gang, too. But so are two quirky, highly resourceful thugs who prove to be the most interesting characters in the tale. The teens have unknowingly stolen a laptop with a powerful criminal’s darkest secret, and the thugs will stop at nothing to track it down.
Carl Riggins, a rude, fat, friendless geek with bad skin who grudgingly helps Cole with his case, is the book’s lone false note — a character who conforms to every tired stereotype of a teen computer hacker.
But this is a quibble, because the end result is another rewarding pageturner by one of the most reliable storytellers in modern crime fiction.