Wednesday, April 22, 2026

A Morning for Flamingos


In this 4th Dave Robicheaux installment, Dave is approached by a DEA agent and asked to go undercover back in New Orleans for a sting operation to help catch drug lord Tony Cardo. He'll be presented as a disgraced and dismissed cop who's trying to make some money selling drugs. In the process, Dave hopes to locate and take revenge on a prisoner, an assassin named Boggs, who shot his partner and left Dave for dead in a muddy coulee. Therefore Dave agrees but wants to speed up the process and is soon in the good graces of Cardo himself. What no one predicted is that Dave would come to have some sympathy for Cardo who is the sole caretaker of a disabled son. Here is how Kirkus addresses this conflict: "Dave takes to him and his crippled son Paul much more deeply than to no-good guys like bullying, treacherous Vice Lt. Nate Baxter, who threatens to blow Dave's cover if he doesn't play the game his way. Multiple betrayals force Dave to choose between ... bagging and protecting Tony, between playing by the rules and going all out for Boggs. Another robust study of powerfully shifting motives disguised as an action yarn—thick and strong as southern gumbo."

Here are excerpts from the favorable review by Publishers Weekly: "...proceeds to balance the ... self-doubts of his tough, sympathetic hero with a complex, credible plot in his latest Cajun mystery. Robicheaux, a widower, leaves his small town for New Orleans, where he used to be a cop, to run a sting operation for the DEA. He engineers drug buys aimed at incriminating the local drug lord, an ex-Marine with nightmares and a habit from Vietnam, while trying to ferret out Jimmie Lee Boggs, the killer responsible for the coulee incident.... Attentive to language and atmosphere, Burke delivers action on churning Gulf waters, in city streets, in deserted fields and within the souls of his memorable characters--and a fully satisfying resolution." 

Booklist speaks to the strong sense of place created by Burke and it's meaning for the story and the characters. " James Lee Burke's interest in New Orleans...extends well beyond the travelogue surface. Burke's Cajun detective, Dave Robicheaux, is once again battling personal demons--questions of fear and bravery, violence and compassion, pleasure and pain--and as he stalks an escaped killer and infiltrates the world of a Mafia drug lord, he finds reflections of his own torment wherever he looks. What it means to be Cajun is at the heart of Robicheaux's dilemma: he treasures the easy-living side of his heritage, but with the po' boy sandwiches and the pulsing beat of Zydeco music come the lure of violence and an obsession with bravery and personal honor that consistently puts himself and his loved ones at risk. Can you enjoy beignets at the Cafe du Monde, or hum a chorus of "Jolie Blonde," or sip a Dixie beer without at the same time wanting to bash the head of anyone who smiles at your girl? And when you do bash a head, are you really doing it to protect the things you love or because the simple act of bashing something gives you such a kick? Robicheaux's ongoing attempt to resolve these questions brings new levels of meaning to the way we see New Orleans in particular and the pursuit of pleasure in general. Is the Big Easy really all that easy? Can any of us ever get free enough from our own demons to really experience the pleasures that New Orleans--or life--offers? "

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