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Compulsion (Alex Delaware, No. 22) | 
enlarge | Author: Jonathan Kellerman Publisher: Ballantine Books Category: Book
List Price: $27.00 Buy Used: $0.46 You Save: $26.54 (98%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 73 reviews Sales Rank: 19801
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 034546527X Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780345465276 ASIN: 034546527X
Publication Date: March 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Dust Cover Missing. Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!
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Product Description Once again, the depths of the criminal mind and the darkest side of a glittering city fuel #1 New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman’s brilliant storytelling. And no one conducts a more harrowing and suspenseful manhunt than the modern Sherlock Holmes of the psyche, Dr. Alex Delaware.
A tipsy young woman seeking aid on a desolate highway disappears into the inky black night. A retired schoolteacher is stabbed to death in broad daylight. Two women are butchered after closing time in a small-town beauty parlor. These and other bizarre acts of cruelty and psychopathology are linked only by the killer’s use of luxury vehicles and a baffling lack of motive. The ultimate whodunits, these crimes demand the attention of LAPD detective Milo Sturgis and his collaborator on the crime beat, psychologist Alex Delaware.
What begins with a solitary bloodstain in a stolen sedan quickly spirals outward in odd and unexpected directions, leading Delaware and Sturgis from the well-heeled center of L.A. society to its desperate edges; across the paths of commodities brokers and transvestite hookers; and as far away as New York City, where the search thaws out a long-cold case and exposes a grotesque homicidal crusade. The killer proves to be a fleeting shape-shifter, defying identification, leaving behind dazed witnesses and death–and compelling Alex and Milo to confront the true face of murderous madness.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 68 more reviews...
Very good read... October 8, 2008 Compulsion does follow along the same lines as all the Alex Delaware novels but, that's why we enjoy reading them right? I thought the book had a great flow that really kept me reading into the wee hours of the night. I think it had a good twist at the end, and really enjoy Milo's character, I think he gets better in every book.
Weak October 1, 2008 I thought the plot was weak and plodding. This was my first Delaware book and I found him puzzling. I mean, he kinda just hangs around with this detective, like a dilettante. Meanwhile, the plot lacked intensity. The whole book was mostly Delaware and Milo talking to this person then this person then this person then that person.....and finally they catch the bad guy. Very little action. I found the plot barely believeable. The characters were interesting and the writing was crisp, but when I got to the end of the book I wondered why I bothered reading it.
Middle of the Road for me. September 30, 2008 To me a Alex Deleware novel is usually a big treat. His writing is crisp and the dialog is sharp as usual. However, for some reason this book is merely middle of the road neither exceptionally good or dismally bad. Somewhere or some how something is just missing. Maybe he (Kellerman) needs to take a break from Deleware or do like Sandford and start another character in the same vein. Kellerman has long been an excellent author and I will continue to buy his books but maybe just in paperback.
Ironically, it's not very compelling September 28, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
As a psychologist, Jonathan Kellerman seems to have learned a thing or two from Pavlov. Kellerman used to write good books, and now many people, myself included, still have that link programmed into our brains: Kellerman equals good book. Unfortunately, it hasn't been true for a while, and Compulsion continues the string of subpar books.
The plot involves a man reporting that his Bentley was stolen, and though the car was found, there was a small amount of blood in it. This trace amount of blood brings detective Milo Sturgis into the case, with narrator Alex Delaware tagging along. (In early novels, Delaware had a reason to be involved in cases; now Kellerman doesn't even bother justifying the reason.) Nothing much comes of the case until a murder case arises later; the tenuous link between this murder and the Bentley is that the killer used a stolen high-end car.
It's not much, but Delaware - who rarely has anything to do other than amateur crime solving - finds links to other crimes, including a murder in a small California town and another one in New York. Meanwhile, Milo actually gets involved in other cases, including an old murder case that is reopened when a death row inmate confesses to the crime.
On rare occasion, Kellerman does write an okay book nowadays, but there hasn't been a semi-decent Delaware book since 2002's The Murder Book, and even that was an aberration in a decade long dry spell. The problems with Compulsion are almost identical to other recent efforts. For one thing, not much actually goes on: the book really consists of Alex (with or without Milo) going from one person to another and asking questions. There is little in the way of action, and Milo and Alex have no real emotional involvement in the story.
And, as is typical in these latest novels, Delaware himself is a non-character with little in the way of personality or even a life. Yes, he has a girlfriend Robin, but she does so little in the book that she is even more of a non-character. When Alex's lover is limited to cameo appearances, it is hard to really care whether they stay together or break up.
Usually by the time these novels come into paperback, the covers and the first few pages are filled with blurbs of praise, but Complusion can offer only two, one from the Orlando Sentinel and one from the Boston Herald. Perhaps this dearth of compliments (including none from big national periodicals) shows that more and more people are catching on to how weak Kellerman's books have been. Is it a Pavlovian response that makes me continue to buy and read his books, or is it my hope he will regain his lost form? Either way, at least I can discourage others from being subjected to Compulsion.
What has happened with this book? September 26, 2008 I am bogged down trying to make heads or tails of COMPULSION. I am a long-time fan of Jonathan Kellerman and have read all his novels. It appears that some of his strong points have disappeared with this book. The easy-read style has changed and this makes for tedious reading. He hops his main characters from place to place without smooth transitions. It seems improper to review a book when only half-way through it, but this book leaves a lot to be desired. At this point I'm ready to put the book back on the shelf. Please make your next book an entertaining experience Mr. Kellerman.
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