Author | Lee Goldberg |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Monk mystery novel series |
Genre | Mystery novel |
Publisher | Signet Books |
Publication date | October 30, 2007 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 288 pp |
ISBN | 0-451-22098-6 |
OCLC | 144330126 |
813/.54 22 | |
LC Class | PS3557.O3577 M77 2007 |
Preceded by | Mr. Monk and the Two Assistants |
Followed by | Mr. Monk Goes to Germany |
Mr. Monk in Outer Space is the fifth novel in the Monk mystery novel series by writer Lee Goldberg, published on October 30, 2007. [1] [2] In the novel, Conrad Stipe, creator of the popular science fiction TV series Beyond Earth, is gunned down outside a Beyond Earth convention. Monk and Natalie are called in, and Monk learns that his brother Ambrose is a big expert on the show, causing a feud between the brothers.
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.(July 2011) |
Brandon Lorber, CEO of Burgerville, a national fast-food chain, is found in his office, shot three times à la the Mozambique Drill. Natalie Teeger and Adrian Monk respond to the call. Captain Stottlemeyer introduces them to an old friend, ex-policeman Archie Applebaum, who now works as a security guard, and who found the body. Lieutenant Disher tells them that the M.O. indicates a professional killer. As Archie said he never heard anything, the killer probably used a silencer. The killer obscured his face while on security cameras.
Monk concludes Brandon Lorber died of a heart attack, since Lorber's shirt is wrinkled from grabbing at his chest. There would have been more blood present if his heart was still functioning when he was shot. Since it's not a homicide, Stottlemeyer appoints Disher head of a "Special Desecration Unit" to take over the case.
Natalie stays with his brother Ambrose because he is having his carpet replaced. The next morning, Monk and Natalie arrive at a crime scene outside the San Francisco Airporter Motor Inn. Conrad Stipe, creator of the cult science fiction TV series Beyond Earth, was shot and killed climbing out of a taxi while arriving at a Beyond Earth convention. Surveillance cameras around the parking lot have caught the shooter, dressed as Mr. Snork, one of the protagonists of the show.
Investigating the convention, Adrian is appalled at the complexity of Beyond Earth's premise, the devotion to the show shown by the "Earthers" (fans), and the discovery that Ambrose has authored several Earther books. He learns that a revamped Beyond Earth is being created, suggesting that Stipe was killed by a disgruntled fan for allowing a less-than-faithful adaptation of the show.
Monk and Natalie interview Kingston Mills, the executive producer of the new Beyond Earth. Natalie suggests Mills could have killed Stipe to get his cut from the show's profits, but Mills reveals that Stipe had a pay-or-play contract, so Stipe's share goes to his estate, not Mills. Arianna Stipe, Conrad Stipe's ex-wife, is suing the estate for half of the profits from the new show, and has taken her divorce lawyer Howard Egger as her lover, but she was on a plane when Conrad was killed.
Examining the surveillance video, Ambrose notices that the uniform the killer is wearing is from the Beyond Earth pilot, but the ears are from season two. Ambrose believes an Earther would never wear a costume with such inaccuracies. He also notices that the uniform is brand-new, which means it must have been purchased from Ursula Glemstadt, the only Earther who makes uniforms with the design from the pilot, at the convention. Adrian scornfully dismisses these facts as insignificant. Natalie is appalled, since Adrian normally solves cases based on such small details.
Stottlemeyer and Disher examine Phil Bisson, a cab driver who was shot and killed at around 1:00 AM. It is believed that Bisson was flagged down by a gunman, who forced him out of his cab at gunpoint, led him to a deserted lot, shot him, took his money, and fled. But Monk is convinced the scene was staged: Bisson never told his dispatcher that he was picking someone up, and the cab appears to have made a U-turn to face the street. None of the residents nearby heard a gunshot, indicating that the killer used a silencer, which is not normally employed in petty robbery. Examining the cab's interior, Monk concludes from a piece of gum in the backseat which matches one in the cab Stipe took and a candy wrapper that came from a bowl of coffee candies in Lorber's office that the same man who killed the cabbie desecrated Brandon Lorber and killed Stipe.
Monk determines a shredded document found on Lorber's desk was planted; the document had a regular paper clip, but Lorber had a color-coded system of organizing files. It also is badly streaked, meaning it was shredded and then put back together. They talk to the forensics accountant, who tells them about Burgerville's financial irregularities and reveals that the company is on the verge of collapse from a series of scandals. Monk says he has solved the case: Someone hired a hit man to kill Lorber, but when the hit man arrived, Lorber was dead. The hit man shot Lorber's body to make it look like he did his job, so he could collect his fee. The hit man caught a taxi to the airport. After Phil Bisson dropped the assassin off, he picked up Conrad Stipe. The hit man left something incriminating in the cab, and had to kill both Stipe and the cabbie because they would have figured out what the object meant. He used a Mr. Snork costume while killing Stipe, making sure to be seen on security cameras, so that police would focus suspicions on the Earthers.
Monk and Natalie head to Burgerville's building to question Andrew Cahill, the company's CFO and acting CEO. He admits that he has been cooperating with a Justice Department investigation into Burgerville's financial practices, and has been granted immunity from prosecution while testifying about the financial misdeeds Lorber committed. When asked if Lorber had any enemies, Cahill tells them to check out Lorber's wife Veronica. Monk tests a shredder in Lorber's office, and determines that the shredded document found on Lorber's desk came from Cahill's shredder, indicating that Cahill is lying and also is part of the embezzlement scheme.
Monk and Natalie talk to Veronica Lorber, who contradicts Cahill, and says that Lorber was not involved with the financial scandal and Cahill was responsible. Monk suspects Cahill and Veronica are secret lovers.
The next morning, Monk and Natalie head back to the San Francisco Airport, where Kingston Mills has been killed. Mills arrived at the convention in his chauffeured car, and a gunman dressed as Mr. Snork shot him in the shoulder. Mills ran, but the shooter shot him in the leg, then stepped up to him and shot him in the back. Despite obvious differences in the m.o. (Mills was shot three times instead of once), Stottlemeyer insists that both shootings are connected, as this shooter wore a Mr. Snork costume.
Watching footage of the shooting, Ambrose notes that this shooter has a Mr. Snork uniform which is accurate in every detail, carried his handgun like a Beyond Earth weapon and not like an ordinary handgun, and is speaking a fictional Beyond Earth language called Dratch. Adrian congratulates Ambrose for revealing the killer to be Ernest Pinchuk, the leader of the "Galactic Uprising," a fan group protesting the new Beyond Earth show.
As Pinchuk is interrogated, Monk continues to insist that Pinchuk did not kill Stipe, since he would never wear an inaccurate Beyond Earth uniform. Stottlemeyer is not convinced. Monk and Natalie return to Burgerville headquarters and inform Archie Applebaum that Lorber had a heart attack before he was shot. Monk believes Archie discovered that Lorber had pillaged the company's pension plan and wanted to exact revenge. He says all the evidence points to an inside man, but does not explain why he rules out Cahill or Veronica, who Natalie notes were also on the inside. By informing Archie of Lorber's heart attack, he is tricking Archie into calling the hit man for a meeting to demand his money back. Monk and Natalie enter the building to photograph the meeting, but accidentally lock themselves in. There is also no meeting to photograph, as the hit man immediately shoots Archie, then comes for Monk and Natalie after they shout a warning to Archie on the P.A. system. Monk tells Natalie to run while he stalls the hit man. Natalie runs outside, gets in her car, and crashes it into the building just as Archie (who was wearing a bulletproof vest) shoots the hit man.
Stottlemeyer and Disher talk to Archie, learning his reasons for hiring the hit man: he had never given up being a cop, and late at night, he often searched his employees' offices and desks. He discovered the report and realized that Lorber had pillaged the pension fund, and knowing that Lorber was not likely to get hard time, had to do something about it.
Monk gets the hit man to tell him what it was he dropped in the cab: his BlackBerry, which had emails between him and Archie, photos of Lorber, and a diagram of the building. After he killed Stipe, the hit man arranged to have the cabbie deliver the phone to him.
Beyond Earth is largely a parody of Star Trek.
Several references are made to the events of this story in later novels. In Mr. Monk Gets Even , it is noted that computer magnate Cleve Dobbs lives a few doors down from the Lorbers' house. It is also noted that Dobbs's first murder victim, Bruce Grossman, was a CEO-for-hire who took over and briefly ran Burgerville in the wake of the Brandon Lorber investigation.
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Adrian Monk, portrayed by Tony Shalhoub, is the title character and protagonist of the USA Network television series Monk. He is a renowned former homicide detective for the San Francisco Police Department. Monk has obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) and multiple phobias, all of which intensified after the murder of his wife Trudy, resulting in his suspension from the department. He works as a private police homicide consultant and undergoes therapy with the ultimate goal of overcoming his grief, taking control of his phobias and disorder, and being reinstated as a police detective.
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Mr. Monk Gets Even is the fifteenth novel written by Lee Goldberg to be based on the television series Monk. It was published on December 31, 2012. Like the other novels, the story is narrated by Natalie Teeger, Monk's assistant. It is the final novel of the series to be written by Lee Goldberg.
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