Mr. Monk Goes to Germany
Mr. Monk Goes to Germany is the sixth novel by Lee Goldberg to be based on the television series Monk. It was published on July 1, 2008.[1][2] Plot summaryWhen Dr. Kroger, Adrian Monk's psychiatrist, leaves for a conference in Lohr, Germany, Monk falls apart. No longer able to solve crimes, Monk decides to follow Dr. Kroger to Lohr. His assistant Natalie Teeger helps him as payback for the time that Kroger used medication to enable Monk to follow her to Hawaii (Mr. Monk Goes to Hawaii). As Monk has a fear of flying, he takes Dioxynl, a drug that relieves him of his compulsions and phobias, but limits his ability to solve crimes. Monk and Natalie land at Frankfurt International Airport, rent a car, and drive into Lohr. The Dioxynl wears off and Monk shows up at the Franziskushöhe, where the conference is being held, to keep his appointment with Dr. Kroger. Kroger remonstrates Natalie for enabling Monk to engage in stalking behavior and says he may have to stop seeing Monk because of this. Natalie points out that he cannot refuse Monk's appointment without causing himself embarrassment, and Kroger goes ahead with the session. Monk emerges relaxed, and even solves a homicide in San Francisco over the phone. Natalie is prepared to enjoy a German vacation, but Monk spots a man with six fingers on his right hand, matching the description of the man who hired Trudy's killer. He loses sight of the man, and concludes that the only way he can find him is to get local police to do a door-to-door search. The local homicide captain, Kriminalhauptkommissar Stoffmacher, is caught up in the homicide of Axel Vigg. Monk offers to resolve the case in order to free up the police to find the eleven-fingered man. Examining the scene, Monk finds that the fatal shot was actually fired from the adjacent apartment, with a painting moved to cover the hole in the wall. A bullet hole in the couch, attributed by the police to a test shot, was fired to get gunshot residue on Vigg's hands and make the death look like a suicide. Bruno Leupolz, the resident of the adjacent apartment, is absent, and has a change of clothes left on his unmade bed. Stoffmacher thinks Leupolz fled after accidentally killing Vigg, but Monk suspects both Leupolz and Vigg were killed by a third party, noting ashes from burned papers in the fireplace and a missing pillow which he thinks was used as a silencer due to the feathers scattered through the apartment. Monk goes to tell Dr. Kroger about the eleven-fingered man, and sees the eleven-fingered man getting his picture taken with Dr. Kroger. This makes him and Natalie think that Kroger is part of a massive conspiracy to prevent Monk from ever re-joining the police department. The eleven-fingered man introduces himself as Dr. Martin Rahner, who runs a mountain retreat for people with physical abnormalities. Monk tells Natalie to watch the hiking trails leading to the Franziskushöhe and follow Rahner if he leaves. On a trail she stumbles upon Bruno Leupolz's dead body. Leupolz's shoes are tied with Norwegian reef knots, and his running shoes are clean despite the copious mud on the trail, suggesting that someone dressed him and carried him to the trail post mortem. Monk suggests the police dredge the nearby pond for the laptop and pillow that were missing from Leupolz's apartment, but Stoffmacher doubts that Leupolz was murdered, since there are no wounds on his body, shattering Monk's original theory that Leupolz was shot. The conspiracy theory is strengthened when Captain Stottlemeyer and Lieutenant Disher research Rahner and find that he was in the Bay Area two weeks before Trudy's death, on a lecture tour funded by Monk's old enemy, Dale "The Whale" Biederbeck. Monk confronts Kroger and Rahner, and insists that having six fingers on one hand is a unique condition that unambiguously ties Rahner to Trudy's murder. To prove him wrong, Dr. Kroger and Rahner take Monk and Natalie on a tour of Rahner's mountain retreat and introduce him to another man with six fingers on his right hand. Monk not only is unconvinced that Rahner did not kill Trudy, but is now convinced that Rahner killed Bruno Leupolz, since Rahner's shoes are tied with Norwegian reef knots. However, the coroner's report shows Leupolz died of a heart attack, and no signs of toxins. Monk remains convinced it was murder, arguing that Rahner could have triggered the heart attack with a warning shot, coincidentally killing Vigg with the same shot, then transferred Rahner to the hiking trail in an effort to hide the connection between the two deaths. Leupolz's profession, journalism, provides a likely motive. Stoffmacher argues the evidence for this theory is insufficient, so Monk and Natalie fly to Berlin and question Leupolz's editor in hopes of confirming a motive. The editor affirms that Leupolz was trying to prove Rahner's credentials were fake and he was embezzling money from his clinic. Monk takes Dioxynl to enable him to fly back to Lohr and search for the place where Rahner hid Leupolz's body until morning. He and Natalie find a rotting wooden shack. While searching it for evidence, someone locks them in and sets the shack on fire. To escape, Monk and Natalie smash through the shack wall and fall into the pond muck, where Monk stumbles upon a trash bag containing the missing laptop and pillow, and a set of gloves modified to contain a sixth finger on the right hand. As further proof of Rahner's guilt, the photo of him with Kroger shows pillow feathers on his clothes. While under the influence of Dioxynl, Monk cheerfully allows himself to be photographed in his muck-splattered state. Natalie uses the photo to blackmail Monk into agreeing to stopping for a few days in Paris, France, on their way home. The conspiracy plotline is left unresolved; in the final chapter Natalie mentions that Monk "proved that Dr. Kroger didn't betray [him]", but how Monk did this is never shown. Whether or not Rahner is the man who hired Trudy's killer is also left unanswered. Continuity
List of charactersCharacters from the television series
Original characters
Footnotes
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