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Jupiters Bones [Mass Market Paperback]

F Kellerman
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Jun 21 2000 Peter Decker & Rina Lazarus Novels

Once Dr. Emil Euler Ganz was a preeminent astrophysicist with a worldrenowned reputation. But then he vanished without any warning to his family or colleagues. Fifteen years later, he reappeared as "Father Jupiter," the founder and charismatic leader of the scientific cult, The Order of the Rings. And now he's dead--a vial of sleeping pills and an empty bottle of vodka standing near his lifeless body.

Was Ganz's death an accident? Suicide? Or did someone hasten Jupiter prematurely out of this world? These are the questions LAPD Lieutenant Peter Decker and his Homicide team are determined to answer as they enter the cult's fortresslike compound. But the dead leader's four "privileged" attendants make it clear that the police are not welcome there--and the mysterious disappearance of two of the Order's members, including a child, turns an already uncomfortable situation even uglier and more incendiary. Decker will need more than the wisdom and support of his wife, Rina Lazarus, to defuse a ticking time bomb of jealousy, greed, bizarre hidden pasts, and deadly secrets--one that could explode at any time into mayhem so pernicious that it threatens to destroy a multitude of misguided lives--and scores of helpless, innocent children as well.


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From Amazon

Faye Kellerman's 11th Peter Decker-Rina Lazarus mystery takes police lieutenant Decker into the enclave of a Heaven's Gate-style pseudoscientific religious cult, the Order of the Rings of God. The cult's leader, a former world-class physicist who styles himself Jupiter, has died of an ungodlike combination of liquor and prescription drugs, but whether it was accident, suicide, or murder is suspiciously murky. The death is mysteriously reported by Jupiter's estranged daughter Europa, a scientist who has nothing to do with the cult, and when the police arrive on the scene, they find that Jupiter's followers, particularly his four unpleasantly ambitious personal attendants, range from uncooperative to downright hostile. Decker's suspicions kick into high gear when two other cult members go missing and another body turns up. But with the tense situation threatening to unravel as explosively as Jonestown or Waco, it's Marge, Decker's professional sidekick, who penetrates the cult's inner sanctum and effects a scary eleventh-hour rescue.

For Decker, as always, the mystery serves to offset the tempestuous Orthodox Jewish family life that he married into. Sammy, Rina's older son, wants to study in a politically unstable region of Israel, and Jake, the younger, is teetering on the edge of a most unorthodox social scene of girls, porn movies, and pot. Kellerman knows how to craft a compelling mystery, but it's the honesty of Decker's unique religious and family struggles that keeps mystery fans interested book after book. If you're new to this series, you'll want to begin at the beginning with The Ritual Bath. --Barrie Trinkle --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

In her 11th Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus mystery (Moon Music, etc.), Kellerman develops the theme of parent-child relationships along two fronts. Before Father Jupiter became the head of a religious cult called the Order of the Rings of God, he was a renowned astrophysicist named Dr. Emil Euler Ganz. Though Jupiter has long been out of touch with his family, when he dies mysteriously his estranged daughter, Europa, becomes a pivotal help to LAPD detective Decker's investigation. Jupiter's death looks like suicideAuntil the autopsy reveals small amounts of arsenic in his body. Then two of the four remaining cult leaders are killed, prompting the cops to suspect that a serial killer is lurking among the group's members. When the police and FBI try to storm the cult's compound, Brother Bob, Jupiter's old attendant, wires the buildings and threatens to blow up everyone, leaving Decker to figure out how to save the lives of the compound's 96 children. Meanwhile, because of the pressures of the case, Decker is failing to give his two teenage stepsons the attention they need to weather the upheavals of adolescence. He relies on the help of his wife, Rina, to understand the rules of the boys' Jewish orthodox upbringing, but there are aspects of their lives he must take the time to find out on his own. Kellerman writes spine-tingling suspense and defines her characters well, but the scenes in which experts lecture the cops on physics and cult psychology are overlong and sometimes superfluous. Although the Decker/Lazarus family relationship strengthens in this novel, this is not the strongest of the series. (Aug.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read! May 19 2004
By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
One of the best mystery/crime novels I have read. I think it would make a wonderful movie too.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Suspects, Including a Gaggle of Gurus Mar 8 2004
Format:Hardcover
L.A. Police Lieutenant Pete Decker is called in to investigate the death of a cult leader, the charismatic Father Jupiter of the Order of the Rings of God, the former famous astromoner, Dr. Emil Ganz.

There are suspects galore. Ganz had made a lot of enemies when he was a scientist and his leadership of the cult was coveted by some of his followers. Added to that are the relatives of people who have been lured into the cult. The police probably wouldn't even have been notified of Ganz's death, which had already been called a suicide by the other cult leaders, if someone hadn't told his estranged daughter. She, in turn, called the police.

Getting into the compound and getting cooperation from the members is difficult enough for Decker, but it's complicated by a struggle for power by the four privileged attendants, who are; Pluto, Venus, Nova and Bob. Brother Pluto is livid with anger because of the invasion of the police into their sacred sanctuary.

In addition to Jupiter's death, the police learn that two of the cult members, one a child, are missing. Pluto shifts between accusing the police and a cult deprogrammer of stealing these two from their happy home.

And as usual in a Faye Kellerman novel, there's problems on the home front. It appears that Decker's younger stepson, Jacob, is smoking pot and messing around with his girlfriend. For many parents that might seem like a teenage phase, but for Orthodox Jews it's a big deal.

Kellerman knows how to write a fast-moving, suspenseful story involving people the reader learns to care about. She also manges to educate the reader about her religion without seeming to preach. Somehow she does it, without it getting in the way of the story. All and all, a very good read.

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3.0 out of 5 stars WRITER'S ARTHRITIS? Nov 16 2003
By Michael Butts TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Mass Market Paperback
After her last two books, I expected much more than JUPITER'S BONES delivers. While the book focuses on one of those Jonestown cults, Kellerman wastes no time in assuming that anything outside the Jewish realm is fair game to the typical barbs and jokes. While in this case, the barbs are justified, Kellerman's continued use of religious stereotypes and obvious religious prejudice, I still think Kellerman should focus more on her mysteries than her religious predilections.
In Ms. Kellerman's favor, she continues to develop her supporting characters, particularly Tom Webster, who is becoming one of my favorite characters as he is smart, witty, and intensely human. Marge's character gets more attention, and although her actions regarding Vega are just too Pollyannish, she remains an enigmatic figure. Why does she have trouble in her relationships? Hmmm..the focus on Sammy and Jacob's problems is a nice touch, but they don't seem like real teenagers at all in Kellerman's hands. They always do the right thing and when they start wandering away from their religious background, Rina harnesses them back in, not all that convincingly either.
Kellerman has remarkably good skills in her writing; this one's too formulaic to be one of her best, but it has moments of real brilliance.
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Most recent customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Fine Writing, Great Entertainment
Faye Kellerman is a very talented writer on many levels, and "Jupiter's Bones" shows her skills in no small way. Read more
Published on Oct 8 2003 by Wendy Kaplan
4.0 out of 5 stars Peter deals with a religious cult
Police Lieutenant Peter Decker is called in on the death of a charismatic leader of a religious cult called the Order of the Rings. Read more
Published on Jun 13 2003 by Karen Potts
3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but..
..too much stuff in it! Just the mystery itself would have been fine. Now, all of a sudden, we have to deal with the problems of a blended family, religious conflicts, teenagers... Read more
Published on Jan 13 2002
1.0 out of 5 stars Way too sick and twisted
I usually like Faye Kellerman's books and am fan of mysteries. This book is just too twisted. It's awful. Read more
Published on Jun 15 2001
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but not a series best
I enjoyed this novel and found some ideas intriguing, such as the religious cult based on modern physics. Read more
Published on April 6 2001 by P. Jørgensen
3.0 out of 5 stars confusing but good
I have always enjoyed the Decker/Lazarus novels and this one was okay. I like the macho family man cop. But this novel got heavy into physics which was over my head. Read more
Published on Mar 16 2001 by "kmiller75"
5.0 out of 5 stars Much better
I had written off Faye Kellerman as an author due to the number of historical errors in Quality of Mercy; however, someone at work loaned me Jupiter's Bones. Read more
Published on Nov 25 2000 by D. E. W. Turner
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Story line
Faye Kellerman put together a good mix of mystery and cult. I really believe that Decker's relationship with his stepsons came full circle. Read more
Published on Nov 8 2000 by R. H Porter
2.0 out of 5 stars Jupiter's Bones Belongs On Jupiter!!
I did not like book at all! I was so bored the entire time. There was so much unnecessary Jewish talk that it got confusing. Read more
Published on Oct 19 2000 by Brad Stonecipher
4.0 out of 5 stars an entertaining novel
I enjoy Faye Kellerman's books because of originality. A man who goes a little nuts and begins a cult, the detective who comes to the scene of the crime, the daughter of the... Read more
Published on Sep 13 2000 by Kathleen P. McCahill
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