Mr. Paradise by Elmore Leonard

Like a great many people I have been a long time fan of Elmore Leonard. Somewhere along the line someone lent me a paperback and I was hooked. Soon I had read through his entire career including the westerns. This was before Get Shorty and other films had hit the big time (although Leonard has had a connection with Hollywood for a long time). Recently, I haven't been as diligent about reading the latest Leonard, but when I saw that his new novel was set in his old haunt Detroit, I figured it was a good time to get reacquainted.

Mr. Paradise is a typical Leonard novel in many ways. It is basically a crime novel, albeit with a sort of love story thrown in. The title comes from Anthony Paradiso, a.k.a Mr. Paradise, a elderly Detroit lawyer with a kinky penchant for cheerleaders (a sleazy lawyer? Shocking!). His assistant in matters sexual is high class call girl Chloe. Chloe has given up on her lucrative escort career to take the easy money that Mr. Paradise provides. Not content with just Chloe, however, Mr. Paradiso wants two cheerleaders to romp around topless in short skirts while he watches old Michigan games. To effect this scenario Chloe talks her roommate, lingerie model Kelly, into donning the maize and blue and picking up the pom-poms (although she draws the line at topless and insists on a tight sweater instead). This turns out to be an ill fated night, however, as Chloe and Mr. Paradiso fall victim to a hit job engineered by a disgruntled employee. While Kelly avoids being killed, she is pulled into the complicated cast of characters behind the hit.

Leonard has long been known for his unique characters and dialog, and Mr. Paradise continues in this tradition. Beside Chloe and Kelly there is Montez Taylor, Mr. Paradiso's gofer, whose grand scheme and poor planning starts the whole plot in motion; Art Krupa and Carl Fontana, the white collar ex-cons who pull the trigger; Lloyd, Mr. Paradiso's houseman, who turns out to be smarter than he looks; and Avern Cohn, the lawyer behind the "work" of Art and Carl. The central character is a Detroit homicide investigator named Frank Delsa. Delsa's job is to clean up the messes that Detroit throws up on a regular basis. He sifts through the clues, the bullshit, and the violence to catch the bad guys; the seemingly never ending stream of often stupid but certainly dangerous criminals. Since his wife's death the job has become the central element in Delsa's life. It is the one thing he knows how to do. Kelly, however, is something he is not used to dealing with; interacting with a seriously attractive model and suspect/witness isn't usually part of the job.

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  • 1 - Jim Carruthers

    Mar 08, 2004 at 5:47 pm

    Elmore Leonard's last couple of novels have disappointed me. They have a lot of promise, but don't really go anywhere, and leave me just saying "meh". Plus, since the success of the movie version of "Get Shorty" he has tended to pander to Hollywood (going so far to toss out casting suggestions in the books with character descriptions).

    However, the audiobook version of "Mr. Paradise", read by Robert Forster is worthwhile.

  • 2 - Rodney Welch

    Mar 10, 2004 at 9:57 pm

    Jim, Leonard has been giving those casting suggestions for years. In Stick he says the lead character looked like Warren Oates -- who would have been a great choice for the part which, to Leonard's lasting dismay, went to Burt Reynolds.

  • 3 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 11, 2004 at 10:58 am

    Thanks Kev, great job.

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