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Dr. Death a novel  Cover Image E-book E-book

Dr. Death a novel

Summary: Someone has murdered euthanasia champion Dr. Eldon Mate--a self-styled Dr. Death responsible for scores of assisted suicides. In a burst of bloody irony, the killer chooses to dispatch the doctor in the back of his own suicide van, hooking Mate up to the killing apparatus dubbed the "humanitron"--and adding some butchering touches of his own. The case is assigned to veteran LAPD homicide detective Milo Sturgis, who turns, once again, to his friend Dr. Alex Delaware. But working this case raises a conflict of interest for Alex so profound that he can't even discuss it with Milo, and the tension that develops between cop and psychologist further complicates an already baffling and complex murder investigation--one whose suspects include the families of Dr. Mate's "travelers," Mate's own son, and a psychopathic killer who relishes the geometry of death.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780345463692 (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
  • ISBN: 0345463692 (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
  • ISBN: 9780345463692 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • ISBN: 0345463692 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
  • Publisher: New York : Ballantine Books, c2000.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Title from eBook information screen.
System Details Note:
Requires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 957 KB) or Mobipocket Reader (file size: 492 KB).
Subject: Delaware, Alex (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Sturgis, Milo (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Child psychologists -- California -- Los Angeles -- Fiction
Detectives -- California -- Los Angeles
Police -- California -- Los Angeles
Physicians -- Crimes against -- Fiction
Murder -- Investigation -- Fiction
Assisted suicide -- Fiction
Los Angeles (Calif.) -- Fiction
Genre: Mystery fiction.
Suspense fiction.
Electronic books.

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 October 2000
    The question of how close assisted suicide is to murder--and how close a death-dealing doctor is to a serial killer--forms the moral backbone of this intriguing thriller, the fourteenth in the Delaware series. After assisting in more than 50 suicides, Dr. Eldon Mate, loosely based upon Dr. Jack Kevorkian, is found murdered in his suicide van, hoisted on his own Humanitron killing machine. LAPD homicide detective Milo Sturgis once again seeks psychologist and friend Delaware's knowledge of behavioral psychology. Delaware's insights into the criminal mind (he posits the killer is after reflected glory here) are both compelling and convincing. (Kellerman himself is a noted psychologist.) The mystery is enhanced by the range of suspects, including the families of the suicides, Dr. Mate's son, and one of Delaware's clients, and by Delaware's own "nasty overlap" of ethical conflicts. A heady blend of criminal profiling and police procedural and another surefire hit from the best-selling Kellerman. --Connie Fletcher Copyright 2000 Booklist 2000
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2000 December
    Partners in crime: The Kellermans share a knack for suspense

    The Kellerman household seems to be in a state of controlled uproar on this particular afternoon. Faye Kellerman is leaving in the morning for a nine-day book tour in Germany. There is a hum of activity in the background during our phone conversation. Last minute preparations and pressing household matters occasionally take Faye away from the call.

    "She's never been to Germany," Jonathan Kellerman tells me during one of his wife's absences. "They've wanted her to come for many years." He says her tour will focus not only on Stalker, (audio) Faye's current thriller, but on many of the other novels in her popular Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus detective series. "She's a big personage in Germany," he adds with obvious pleasure.

    Of course Jonathan Kellerman is no slouch himself. He has written more than a dozen bestsellers in his Alex Delaware series since the mid-1980s. Commenting on the first, When the Bough Breaks, Stephen King announced that Jonathan Kellerman had reinvented the detective novel. Ardent fans continue to agree.

    His latest effort, Dr. Death (audio), centers on the brutal murder of a Kevorkian-like figure. Suspicions fall on the husband of one of Dr. Death's most recent "patients." As always, Los Angeles, vividly described, is also a character in the novel. Many advance readers (including this interviewer) think it may well be his best book yet. Jonathan, who gave up a career as a noted child psychologist to write full-time, believes the book is his most successful attempt to interweave a family psychopathology theme and "a really creepy killer."

    Together, the Kellermans have an extraordinary publishing record. Each produces a novel almost every year, an astonishing pace to sustain for the better part of two decades. Stalker, which focuses on the experiences of Peter Decker's daughter, Cindy, as a rookie in the LAPD, is Faye's most successful book to date, the first to crack the top five in the New York Times bestseller list. Jonathan's last book, Monster, was a bestseller in both hardcover and paperback.

    As we continue the interview, Jonathan mentions that one of their four children is also working on a novel, "a brilliant historical novel, a rather ambitious and wonderful book," he calls it in one of those warm, big-hearted comments that typify his conversational style.

    Jonathan is illustrating a point about the importance of plot. He says his son has come to realize that at some level or another all literature is mystery. It's an excellent point. It's a point that puts Jonathan at odds with much fashionable contemporary writing. And it's a point on which Faye and Jonathan emphatically agree. Unfortunately, I am too distracted to quite take this in. I am thinking: What? Four children? Two prodigious, very successful writing careers under one roof? And now, possibly, a third? How is this possible? How do they ever manage it?

    "Doing well in marriage is a good preface to doing well in a household like this," Faye says. "I think the key to managing this is the art of compromise."

    "Right," Jonathan says. "Faye and I were married 12 or 13 years before either of us got published. It wasn't as if the two of us met at a writer's conference and brought these egos in. Faye was 18 when I met her; I was 21. To the extent that we've grown up at all, we've grown up together. The fact that our relationship was solid before we got published really helped."

    It seems to be true. Throughout the hour we spend talking, the Kellermans graciously take turns answering questions; they trade jokes and witticisms; they encourage one another with praise and endearments and thanks. They say they really don't compete, that they are honestly happy for each other's successes. They seem genuinely to respect one another's work.

    Asked to comment on each other's strengths as writers, they are quick to answer. "From the very outset, Faye had a golden ear for dialogue," Jonathan says. "It took me a while to learn to write dialogue. But Faye could do it right away because she's always been a gifted mimic. She also has an innate sense of pacing. Her books are lean, never padded. The story moves along at a rapid pace, because Faye is that kind of person. She's a busy person. She doesn't have a lot of patience for wasting time."

    Faye responds, "Jonathan's strength is his consistency in always writing a fantastic story, his ability to keep the story moving and his wonderful prose. He uses the perfect metaphor - not five perfect metaphors. He's able to inject much more into his thrillers than the average thriller-writer because of his training as a psychologist and his keen insight into people."

    In fact, the only thing resembling a dispute comes up during a rambunctious discussion of the movies. The two spar playfully over which is the greater movie, Jaws or The Poseidon Adventure. They come to a sort of agreement on Titanic. "That movie finally picked up once they hit the iceberg," Faye exclaims gleefully. "I mean once the water started pouring in, I turned to Jonathan and said, 'All right! Now we've got a movie!'" Jonathan agrees, and adds, "But for me, it wasn't worth waiting through two hours of sloppy romance for 20 minutes of iceberg."

    To be honest, all this warmth and tenderness is a little disconcerting. And the Kellermans know how I feel. "I'm always wary of interviews like this," Jonathan says, partly in jest. "What happens is that we come across as disgustingly smug and goody two-shoes. Honestly, we don't have any big skeletons in our closets. But we're both extremely intense people, with very artistic temperaments. There's no doubt about it."

    Of the two, Jonathan is probably the most intense. "Everything, everything seems destined to impede my writing," he says. "I'm so paranoid about this. I see life as a series of obstacles. I've got to get into my office and not be distracted. I'm just a fanatic about achieving focus, just trying to shut the door and shut off the phone. My secretary knows not to come in for anything short of an emergency."

    Then, during one of Faye's absences, Jonathan says, "Faye has been so wonderful in taking care of me that she basically leaves me free to do this. She manages to do everything, so she's a lot more impressive as a human being."

    "Anything that's great takes a lot, a lot, a lot of work," Faye says, later. "We like to write our books and we're grateful that they're successful, but we do work. This is a job. I mean this is a working household."

    "Faye and I are very much enmeshed," Jonathan says. "We have four kids, we hang out a lot together, we both work at home, we generally have lunch or breakfast together three, four, five times a week. So we're like a retired couple. Our writing is the only private time we have. We each go into our little offices and close the doors. We're each pretty protective of that. We talk about the financial part of the business but we don't talk much about creative aspects. We don't talk shop."

    So the success of this immensely productive marriage isn't just about compromise and work and family? It is also about allowing, even encouraging, private, creative spaces?

    The Kellermans definitely agree. In fact, Faye might be speaking for them both when she says, "We love each other, but this is a very personal thing. Jonathan and I collaborate on almost everything that pertains to life. But we want our stories to be our own. For better or for worse, our books are our own personal little slices of life."

    Alden Mudge writes from his home in Oakland, California. Copyright 2000 BookPage Reviews

  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2000 November #1
    Dr. Alex Delaware is back for his 14th adventure, and this time out he's working with old LAPD buddy Detective Milo Sturgis on a particularly gruesome murder. Dr. Eldon Mate, a Kervorkian-like "Dr. Death," is found vivisected in the back of an Econoline van, hooked up to his "humanitron" suicide machine. A crassfarewell note is stapled to his chest. It's obviously the work of an extremely intelligent and bold killer, and suspects abound: relatives of Mate's "victims," his alienated son, anti-euthanasia activists. Alex jumps into his usual consulting psychologist role, and the search is on. However, this time out both Alex and Milo seem tired and detached, continuing a lethargy started last time around in Monster. Det. Petra Connor, introduced in Billy Straight and given a cameo role here, is much more engaging. But Kellerman is still the master of the psychological thriller. Recommended for popular collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 8/00.] Rebecca House Stankowski, Purdue Univ. Lib., Hammond, IN Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2000 August #1
    Dr. Eldon Mate has helped his last terminally ill patient commit suicide, for now someone has murdered him, using the doctor's own equipment. Even as Kellerman stalwart Dr. Alex Delaware consults on suspects ranging from the families of Mate's patients to the doctor's own son, he wrestles with a serious conflict of interest that could wreck the case. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2000 October #4
    A series of well-publicized gentle deaths are the work of self-appointed angel of mercy Dr. Eldon Mate, who attends to the terminally ill in cheap hotel rooms or in the back of his van. Now Mate himself is dead, carved up and found by two joggers and their dog on a high road above Los Angeles. Like Kellerman's previous bestsellers, this title features psychologist Alex Delaware, whose self-righteous pomposity blends neatly, as it has before, into a narrative liberally dosed with psycho-angles and agreeably warped murder motives. This time out, Delaware works with cop Milo Sturgis and counsels Stacy and Eric Doss, two teenage children getting over their mother Joanne's death, which Dr. Mate seemingly helped to hasten. In his dual role, Delaware encounters a rogue FBI agent tracking a killer obsessed with Mate; Mate's disturbed son; and Richard Doss, the kids' father, who by slipping cash to a shady character in a dark bar is marked as a prime murder suspect. Joanne's illness too proves mysterious. But Kellerman isn't in top form here. Most annoyingly, the FBI guy does the bulk of the sleuthing legwork, while Delaware spends much of the book either making love or pontificating on motivations for characters all very similarly flawed. The ending is agreeably tricky, but by then great gobs of Delaware have either delighted Kellerman's faithful or else turned readers' stomachs in a way that serial deaths, gentle or otherwise, may have somehow failed to do. Kellerman's rep and the book's strong, geometric cover will send this one on to the lists. (Dec. 5) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
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