Guilt an Alex Delaware novel
Record details
- ISBN: 9780345538819 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 0345538811 (electronic bk.)
-
Physical Description:
electronic resource
remote
1 online resource (378 p.) - Edition: 1st ed.
- Publisher: New York : Ballantine Books, c2013.
Content descriptions
Source of Description Note: | Description based on print version record. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Mystery fiction. Electronic books. Fiction. |
Search for related items by series
Other Formats and Editions
Electronic resources
- AudioFile Reviews : AudioFile Reviews 2013 April
John Rubinstein narrates the 28th Alex Delaware mystery with a style that reflects the forensic psychologist's patient logic. The story starts with an emotional gut punch when the body of a baby is found buried in a backyard and the bones of another baby are found in a park next to the body of a young woman. Delaware is called in to profile the person behind the killings. As narrator, Rubinstein reveals Delaware's depth of character as the psychologist takes on a herculean task. Listeners will be mesmerized as Rubenstein recounts sordid details of pagan rituals and the terrifying examination of an insane mind without morals or limits. The story's building tension and Rubinstein's steady pace bring listeners to the satisfying ending. S.M. (c) AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine - Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2013 February #2
The only clue to a buried baby's identity is a vintage Duesenberg. The new owners of the fixer-upper Victorian in LA's posh Cheviot Hills area are appalled when a storm reveals an old metal hospital box containing the skeleton of a dead baby in their yard. The LAPD's Milo Sturgis, who catches the case, drags along his pal, consulting psychologist Alex Delaware (Victims, 2012, etc.). Tracking down former house tenants turns up a pediatric nurse often visited late at night by someone driving a rare Duesenberg, whose ownership leads to a late doctor with severe war wounds who may have provided abortions back in the days before Roe v. Wade. The case is further complicated when another baby, more recently buried, is found in a nearby park with a woman, possibly its mother, lying dead nearby. Would a serial killer space his crimes over 50 years apart? Would he even have the appetite for murder so many years later? The new infant's bones have been picked clean by flesh-eating beetles, then coated with beeswax. The woman turns out to be a missing nanny whose last job was for superstars Prema Moon and Donny Rader, now sequestered on their vast estate with their four adopted kids. The couple's marriage is a sham, their estate manager turns up with a bullet in his head, and another of their nannies has also departed without notice. After Alex tails Prema, she decides that she'll pay $300 for a 45-minute session with him, and that lets loose a three-hankie tale of marital woe that ends with Milo and a forensic crew surrounding the film stars' living complex. Too slick, too generous with coincidences and too cute by far. One pet pooch in particular is so endearing she ought to be in a Disney movie. Copyright Kirkus 2013 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved. - Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2013 March #3
Three decades after the debut of Kellerman's psychologist detective, the 28th entry (after 2012's Victims) is a lackluster one and shows the series' age. Newcomers are unlikely to be impressed either by Delaware's psychological or deductive insights. He tells a celebrity patient at her first session that "happiness comes from taking all the credit and none of the blame." A witness's failure to know her sister Adriana Betts' number by heart, relying instead on pressing a button on her cell to automatically place the call, is âevidence' that she hadn't been in close contact with her. Betts has turned up dead of a gunshot wound in the same L.A. park as a defleshed baby's corpse. The infant's remains turned up during excavation of a drainage ditchâand that grim discovery followed the unearthing of an older baby's skeleton in a backyard. The investigations Delaware and his longtime LAPD ally Milo Sturgis conduct are strictly by the numbers, and their solutions are unremarkable. Whatever was innovative in this series is long gone. (Feb)
[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC - PW Annex Reviews : Publishers Weekly Annex Reviews
Three decades after the debut of Kellerman's psychologist detective, the 28th entry (after 2012's Victims) is a lackluster one and shows the series' age. Newcomers are unlikely to be impressed either by Delaware's psychological or deductive insights. He tells a celebrity patient at her first session that "happiness comes from taking all the credit and none of the blame." A witness's failure to know her sister Adriana Betts' number by heart, relying instead on pressing a button on her cell to automatically place the call, is âevidence' that she hadn't been in close contact with her. Betts has turned up dead of a gunshot wound in the same L.A. park as a defleshed baby's corpse. The infant's remains turned up during excavation of a drainage ditchâand that grim discovery followed the unearthing of an older baby's skeleton in a backyard. The investigations Delaware and his longtime LAPD ally Milo Sturgis conduct are strictly by the numbers, and their solutions are unremarkable. Whatever was innovative in this series is long gone. (Feb)
[Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC