Books : Therapy (Alex Delaware)

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Author name: Jonathan Kellerman

 : Therapy (Alex Delaware)
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Type of bind: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9780345452603
ISBN number: 0345452607
Label: Ballantine Books
Manufacturer: Ballantine Books
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 512
Printing Date: March 29, 2005
Publishing house: Ballantine Books
Release Date: March 29, 2005
Sale Popularity Level: 73981
Studio: Ballantine Books




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
Jonathan Kellerman has made the psychological thriller his own gripping province with his bestselling series of Alex Delaware novels. Now, Delaware’s new adventure leads the sleuthing psychologist on a harrowing exploration into the realm he knows best: the human psyche, in all its complexity, mystery, and terrifying propensity for darkness.

“Been a while since I had me a nice little whodunit,” homicide detective Milo Sturgis tells Alex Delaware. But there’s definitely nothing nice about the brutal tableau behind the orange crime-scene tape. On a lonely lover’s lane in the hills of Los Angeles, a young couple lies murdered in a car. Each bears a single gunshot wound to the head. The female victim has also been impaled by a metal spike. And that savage stroke of psychopathic fury tells Milo this case will call for more than standard police procedure. As he explains to Delaware, “Now we’re veering into your territory.”

It is dark territory, indeed. The dead woman remains unidentified and seemingly unknown to everyone. But her companion has a name: Gavin Quick—and his troubled past eventually landed him on a therapist’s couch. It’s there, on familiar turf, that Delaware hopes to find vital clues. And that means going head-to-head with Dr. Mary Lou Koppel, a popular celebrity psychologist who fiercely guards the privacy of her clients . . . dead or alive.

But when there’s another gruesomely familiar murder, Delaware surmises that his investigation has struck a nerve. As he trolls the twisted wreckage of Quick’s tormented last days, what he finds isn’t madness, but the cold-blooded method behind it. And as he follows a chain of greed, corruption, and betrayal snaking hideously through the profession he thought he knew, he’ll discover territory where even he never dreamed of treading.

As provocative as it is suspenseful, Therapy is premier Kellerman that finds the award-winning author firing on all creative cylinders—and carrying readers on an electrifying ride to a place only he can take them, for an experience they won’t soon forget.


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - You may enjoy these books as well
If you are into self discovery and for thinkers, I got these recommendations from another writer, I read them and highly enjoyed them. These two books are very easy to comprehend, and they are one of a kind. Check it out RUMI & SELF PSYCHOLOGY (PSYCHOLOGY OF TRANQUILITY) and SARA'S THERAY: THE WAY TO PURITY (A SESSION BY SESSION TALK OF AN ACTUAL THERAPY PROCESS OF SELF GROWTH).



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - What an awful book
I went in with low expectations. I figured it would just be a time-waster to read on an airplane. But this book was simply terrible. Terrible. My very first problem was that it was dull. The second was that the plot was often unbelievable, with lucky accidents happening a bit too often. The third was that the characters were dreadful cliches. And I mean dreadful. The convicts were all bad stereotypes. The cops were all bad stereotypes. The activists at a book reading were all bad stereotypes. The "valley girl" character was a bad stereotype. It's as though he did his research by watching bad movies, instead of looking at real life, finding interesting character attributes, and making each character a real person. Terrible, and inexcusable. Actually, I think my guess at how he did his research is probably right on, because even worse than all of this, anytime he wrote about anything I know anything about at all, he got the facts wrong. Small examples: he talks of convicts in california pumping free weights in prison, but I used to work in a supermax, and California got rid of free weights in prisons. Also, he talks of some stabbings in prison that he says are typical of how murders are committed. I know from inmates that if they are trying to kill someone, they don't stab where or in the way he said they do. Likewise with so many other details. A really really really sloppy book.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - A great psychological thriller that avoids psychological techno-speak!
When a young couple parked for a little late night loving beside an empty house on Mulholland Drive are found murdered with what appears to be sexual overtones, LAPD Detective Milo Sturgis is stumped. While the woman eludes identification completely, Milo and his consulting psychologist sidekick, Alex Delaware, identify the male as Gavin Quick, a troubled young man undergoing psychotherapy as a result of behavioural changes attributed to a severe head injury he received in a car accident. The chance discovery that Quick's therapist, Mary Lou Koppel, had another patient who was murdered only a year earlier seemed like a coincidence until Koppel herself was found murdered with an MO that resembled the very first double killing. The game is on as Sturgis and Delaware track the killer on a convoluted trail that crosses prison reform, group therapy, fraudulent billing and insurance scams, Rwandan genocide (yes, you read that one right) and mercenary killers for hire!

That may all seem a little far-fetched, to be sure, but the story rests on a firm foundation of clues and, as always, thought-provoking analysis and deductions that rely on Delaware's understanding of the human condition as a psychologist. But, unlike "Rage", a story which was a near incomprehensible thicket of psycho-babble, "Therapy" is a straightforward police procedural but set firmly and predictably in Kellerman's well-known psychology environment.

Much of the story is told in the form of a give-and-take brainstorming dialogue between Delaware and Sturgis in which they bounce their ideas about the case off one another. While this technique may prove wearisome and perhaps difficult to follow in a regular book format, Rubenstein's scintillating performance on the audio book presentation brought Kellerman's command of realistic dialogue to life and made this form of story-telling straightforward and marvelously entertaining!

There was also a moment toward the end of the novel that deserves special recognition. Of course, the Jane Doe from the opening chapters was ultimately identified. When her brother arrived to confirm the identification and claim the body, the conversation that he had with Delaware was so bleak, so poignant and so gut-wrenching, it almost broke my heart. Frankly, I've always thought of Kellerman as a thriller writer and I never thought that he had writing at that level in him.

Highly recommended.

Paul Weiss



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Enjoyed it
My 2nd audiobook of Kellerman's Delaware and Sturgis team. First one was RAGE. First of all, the narrator Rubinstein is nothing short of perfect the way he portrays Delaware and Sturgis. I found the book interesting and entertaining from beginning to end. I liked it better than RAGE.
Ending was a little flat but not as bad as RAGE's. I recommend the book.....especially the audio book!



Rated by buyers 2 out of 5 stars - This was a disappointment
I had a hard time finishing this book. The characters were all created nicely, but the book bored me, the end was just too bland, nothing shocking, and no resolution for the reader. I won't read any more of his books.

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