“No one writes better detective novels. . .A creator of muscular, violent, headlong stories that honor and at the same time expand conventions of the form. . .Truly astonishing.” (Washington Post Book World)“For grand escape, get your hands on A MORNING FOR FLAMINGOS. Burke is one of the most polished mystery novelists alive; his hero, Cajun detective Dave Robicheaux, is as ripe and as real as they get. . .The man can write.” (Boston Globe)“As elegant and moody as a New Orleans night.” (Toronto Globe and Mail)“The plotting is intricate and the action is robust. . .Burke creates rich, complicated characters and treats them with tremendous compassion. And he fashions passages of prose as haunting as any writer at work in America today.” (New Orleans Times-Picayune) Clutching the shards, of his shattered life, Cajun detective Dave Robicheaux has rejoined the New lberia police force. His partner is dead -- slain during a condemned prisoner's bloodyflight to freedom that left Robicheaux critically wounded...and reawakened the ghost of his haunted, violent past. Now he's trailing a killer into the sordid head of die Big Easy-caught up in the lethal undercurrents of a mob double-cross...confronting his most dangerous enemy: himself James Lee Burke is the author of nineteen novels, including eleven starring the Detective Dave Robicheaux. Burke grew up on the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast, where he now lives with his wife, Pearl, and spends several months of the year in Montana. Read more
Features & Highlights
A Morning for Flamingos
is a classic Dave Robicheaux Louisiana mystery by
New York Times
bestselling author James Lee Burke. Desperately holding together the pieces of his shattered life, Cajun detective Dave Robicheaux has rejoined the New Iberia police force. While transporting two death-row prisoners, Dave is wounded, his partner is killed. Now he’s trailing a killer into the heart of the Big Easy’s underworld.
Embroiled in a world of drug dealers, prostitutes, and double-crosses, Robicheaux is forced to confront his most dangerous enemy: himself. Absorbing and masterfully executed,
A Morning for Flamingos
is one of Edgar Award–winning author James Lee Burke’s most enduring southern crime novels.
Customer Reviews
Rating Breakdown
★★★★★
60%
(1.9K)
★★★★
25%
(787)
★★★
15%
(472)
★★
7%
(220)
★
-7%
(-220)
Most Helpful Reviews
★★★★★
5.0
AFDBEZLWDB6L27O5KF6O...
✓ Verified Purchase
Building a Better Burke
This is, without a doubt, one of the better of the Dave Robicheaux novels. As always, James Lee Burke writes with a lyrical grace that should awe the average reader. And this early novel was written before he started plagiarizing himself wholesale, stealing plots, characters and even entire paragraphs in order to flesh out his balletic swamp-songs.
A black mark on this otherwise fine novel is the odd decision to have Dave go undercover in the home of Mobster Tony Cardo, a razor-edged freak of a man living on the outlines of his own criminal organization. Personally, if I were a crook, I'd never accept an ex-cop into my home, but maybe that's just me - the fact is that tony does and that's how this rollicking book gets going.
It's not important that there's any more plot than that - in a Burkle novel, the setting is the most important element. As always, Burke paints pictures and only incidentally places characters and action within them, with the exception of Dave Robicheaux himself. I have always admired Dave - he is morally ambiguous and righteously angry, which causes him to behave in ways that are almost as freakish as Tony Cardo's ways. An example is dave's heroism at the climax of this novel - it's both awe-inspiring and breathtaking, but it's probably not what I wold have done in the same situation.
Burke is an amazing writer and a good story-teller. He's not a bad painter, either.
30 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
AFQHN6KJ5BGEKXAH7Z5K...
✓ Verified Purchase
Burke On Track
I had just about given up on James Lee Burke. After being stunned with the genius of "Neon Rain," I found most contemporary Dave Robicheaux novels rather gloomy and over-described affairs. Went back to "Black Cherry Blues" his Edgar-winning novel and was disappointed. Now, I feel I've read another gem. I am doubly pleased because from reading and seeing interviews, I think James Lee Burke is one of the most charming authors around.
"A Morning for Flamingos" begins with the death of Dave's partner while transporting two prisoners, Te Beau, a New Iberia boy to whom Dave has certain obligations, and the menacing Jamie Lee Boggs. Dave is left critically wounded and remembers little of the actual escape. The story leads to underworld figures, voodoo, and the sordid, steamy underside of New Orleans.
The pace and brooding menace never let up, and Burke allows no loose ends to annoy the reader. The characterizations are sharp, descriptive, and unforgettable. The solution is elegant and exciting. I liked Dave all over again.
27 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AGTOFORKKVTBVG3EGTXG...
✓ Verified Purchase
Burke's captivating characters set him apart
James Lee Burke didn't write "A Morning for Flamingos" in black and white everything is in shades of gray. Yet what emerges is a richly textured mystery filled with a cast of characters as colorful as their Bayou surroundings.
It starts when Cajun detective Dave Robicheaux rejoins the New Iberia police department to pay off a few thousand dollars of debt and is nearly killed when a routine convict transport goes bad. And it ends with him in a $500,000 drug deal facing off against the same escaped murderer who nearly kills him at the beginning.
In between, Robicheaux fades to the background, becoming the eyes for the reader to see and evaluate everyone he encounters. There's his ex cop partner who now runs a bar, his old high school sweetheart who married into the mob and then couldn't break free, the top mob boss in New Orleans with a tender spot for his handicapped son, an illiterate "Negro" convicted of a crime he didn't commit but didn't stop and a bayou juju who has everyone scared of her.
Yet unlike many mysteries where characters like these would be eccentrics to provide comic relief, this one brings them to life. They're real people with real-life struggles, fears and hopes.
Burke accomplishes this feat with his masterful use of dialogue, proving once again that few, if any, mystery authors can convey personality, region and nuances better than he can.
As a result, the reader will struggle with Robicheaux to decide what's moral, what's legal and what's just the right thing to do. Because this is not about rules and regulations it's about people. And that's what makes this so good -- and Burke so special.
10 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AFI7YILO4JRFKRXQXGDB...
✓ Verified Purchase
Hitting his stride...
In A Morning for Flamingos (the fourth Dave Robicheaux mystery), James Lee Burke really hits his stride. This is the best book yet of the six that I've read.
Since Black Cherry Blues, Robicheaux is once again working for the Iberia Sheriff's Department. After fighting a murder charge in book three, he needs to pay off his debts. On a routine transfer of two death row inmates, one of the inmates, Jimmie Lee Boggs, plans an escape. Robicheaux is shot and another detective is killed. At the end of a three month recovery, a DEA agent from a former book, Minor Dautrieve, calls Robicheaux with a proposal. Dautrieve wants Robicheaux to go undercover in New Orleans for the DEA. They will tell everyone he's been fired from law enforcement and are hoping that Robicheaux will lead them to a major mobster in town, Tony Cardo. Robicheaux is reluctant at first, but takes the job in an effort to find Jimmie Lee Boggs (who has been seen in New Orleans).
As the book progresses, Robicheaux gets to know Cardo and the closer he gets, the more conflicted he becomes. Cardo may be a Mafioso, but he's also a loving father to a handicapped son, a tortured Viet Nam vet and a loyal friend. His feelings for Cardo become a major complication with the potential to jeopardize the entire undercover operation. One other complication is the introduction of Bootsie-an old girlfriend whose former husband had mob ties.
In A Morning for Flamingos, Burke is running on all cylinders. His writing is always first rate, but the plot is more inventive and gets away from the formula we've come to expect. While Dautrieve tells Robicheaux "we can't have Wyatt Earp on the payroll," Robicheaux actually shows a little restraint for once. It is Cletus Purcel who starts behaving like a rogue cowboy. Robicheaux operates within the law, while Purcel functions on the fringe. The dynamics of this relationship will continue to develop in future books. But where Burke really excels is his character development. Tony Cardo may coordinate mob activities and drug dealing in southern Louisiana, but Burke portrays him as a tortured and conflicted man. For probably the first time in his 50 years, Robicheaux starts seeing things in other than black and white. And the shades of gray start clouding his vision and his judgment. Burke also shows us how it is possible to love a city and hate it at the same time. Robicheaux as a cop has certainly seen the grimmer side of The Big Easy including the welfare projects that produced prostitution, "rats, cockroaches, incest, rape, child molestation, narcotics and sadistic street gangs," as well as murder. Ironically, Hurricane Katrina has given that steamier side of New Orleans a national audience.
After Heavenly Prisoners, I decided to read two more Robicheaux and then take a break. But after the last two books, I'm not going to be able to wait too long for book number five!
8 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AHN52S7LQCRQ6YATMFX5...
✓ Verified Purchase
Louisiana's Finest
Being a Southern California-based mystery author with my debut novel in its initial release, I realize that there is quite a bit of debate about which crime fiction author best captures the ambience of my native SoCal. There is no debate involving Louisiana. James Lee Burke is clearly the master, and I believe A MORNING FOR FLAMINGOS is Burke's strongest work. Dave Robicheaux is left for dead during a prison escape, yet he doesn't die. He ends up back on the New Iberia police force going after a drug-kingpin named Tony Cardo. Clete Purcel tags along to guard Robicheaux's back, and they wouldn't mind catching up with the man who nearly killed Robicheaux. A MORNING FOR FLAMINGOS has a marvelous plot and well-drawn characters. Reading this book is like visiting that fabulous state of mind known as Louisiana.
8 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AHNGCPSXZZIC7NIJZOIM...
✓ Verified Purchase
"THE BEST OF BURKE"
This is the fourth Burke book I have read, I am trying to take them in order. This is the best one so far, in my openion. Dave Robicheaux is left for dead after two prisoners excape while he and another policeman are moving them to another prison. After he recovers, he is asked to go undercover to help flush out Tony Cardo, a drug dealer. He should be able to get the person who left him for dead at the same time. His old partner, Clete Purcel, wants part of the action to protect Dave's back. They make a good team. Dave begins to have doubts about taking Tony down after he get close to him. Has a good ending. I like the Burke books because you can feel like you are there. I like the language spoken by the Cajun people. All in all a good read, if you like a good mystery with out a lot of blood and guts pouring out, you will like this.
8 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AGI5LL5APDDIDD5NQ6TD...
✓ Verified Purchase
A Cop Story For People Who Don't Read Cop Stories
This was my first reading of James Lee Burke's Dave Robicheaux series and it is easily apparent I have been missing some fine writing. I'm not a big fan of the million big-d&^% cop novels out there. I enjoy a select few, usually those spiced with some humor. If they are dark, and depressing, and full of moralistic BS, I pass. This book, A morning For Flamingos is none of those, nor does it have the overt humor I enjoy. What it has is some fine characterization of Dave Robicheaux as a fragile human being, a caring human being, and the kind of cop one hopes really exists.
I listened to the audio version, and at first I did not care for the narrator, but the story kept me and after the first disc I found I liked that narrator more and more. And, the dang book kept getting better. Not ramped up, adrenaline-soaked action, but understated storytelling that exceeds all my requirements for an enjoying story. I recommend this without reservation, and I'm picking up a few more of Burke's works. But not here, used; at a store, where maybe by the time the leeches get their part, he'll get a quarter.
4 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
AE4QCWEFQAVC4YIQVJLO...
✓ Verified Purchase
He gets more complex with every book
Dave Robicheaux is contemplating life after passing fifty and finds that he is bored with his life. When offered a chance to go under cover by his friend in the DEA, he jumps at the chance. His only request is that Clete goes along as his backup, which no one wants because of Clete's history.
Dave is trying to help bust the biggest drug dealer in the New Orleans area, but finds himself drawn to him as another ex-Vietnam vet who is still suffering from what went on over there. Addicted to black speed and with a handicapped son this drug importer is a multi-faceted character.
In between Dave has to deal with a psychotic killer whose trying to kill him; a NOPD snitch who puts his life in danger because of a crooked cop; drug smugglers, wiseguys and gun monkeys. On top of it all he is reunited with his first love (Bootsie) who he left at home when he went off to 'Nam.
In the end, somethings come out right, some not and some we won't find out for another few books. Oh, yeah, he marries Bootsie and they go back to Bayou Teche to raise Alafair together.
4 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
AE7IXQTKMNVV5FBGBNYO...
✓ Verified Purchase
Tough Time in New Orleans
This 4th book in the Dave Robicheaux series is a tense, gritty visit to the old quarter of New Orleans. Early on, Dave is shot in the chest by Jimmie Lee Boggs, a death row prisoner who was in the process of being transferred in preparation for his execution. After recovering, Dave is asked by the DEA to work undercover in New Orleans in a sting operation to put away Mafia don Tony Cardo. The added lure is the opportunity to catch Boggs and repay him for the bullet.
Once he gains the trust of Cardo, Dave finds himself developing a liking for the crime boss, regardless of the misery he is responsible for dealing out. The feeling of affection is mutual, with a deep respect developing between the two men. He finds that he has to struggle to keep focussed on the reason he's there and put his new friendship aside.
Dave Robicheaux is still a man in torment, particularly after the trauma of being shot had reawakened the nightmares he hoped to have put behind him. James Lee Burke's Louisiana is a grim and dangerous place at times, yet the mouth-watering cuisine seems to make all the danger worthwhile. This is another solid effort in a tremendous series.
4 people found this helpful
★★★★★
5.0
AHGUYMJ4CHDB6XUDGMAK...
✓ Verified Purchase
Cast the movie roles for this great story.
Dave Robicheaux - Tommy Lee Jones; Ellen Barkin -Bootsie Giacano; Tony Cardo - Robert DeNiro; This book will make a great movie. You would only have to blow up two used crop dusters, a real clean hanger and a couple of pickup trucks.