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Monster: A Novel
 
 

Monster: A Novel (Paperback)

by Jonathan Kellerman (Author) "THE GIANT KNEW Richard Nixion ..." (more)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (132 customer reviews)

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Consulting psychologist Alex Delaware has a novel approach to crime-solving: he uses his training to unlock the secrets in the minds of the victims and jiggles the clues he finds there until the right scenario emerges. So when Alex's LAPD buddy Milo finds the hacked-up body of a woman psychologist named Claire Argent in an abandoned car trunk--the second such murder in eight months--Alex heads for her place of employment: the Starkweather State Hospital for the Criminally Insane.

One of Argent's patients at Starkweather is Ardis "Monster" Peake, imprisoned for the unbelievably brutal murders of his mother and the family she worked for, including a small child and a baby. There's at least one eerie similarity between the mutilation of their bodies and Argent's: in all the bodies, the eyes were taken or destroyed. But Peake, diagnosed as schizophrenic and psychotic, is a well-behaved vegetable due to a steady diet of Thorazine, and he hasn't left the hospital since his incarceration 15 years before. How is it, then, that Claire Argent's assistant, Heidi Ott, swears she heard Peake say, "Dr. A. Bad eyes in a box" soon after he hears only the bare fact of her death? And why does Alex find Peake so empathetic, in spite of his violent past and chillingly vacant mind? When other mutilated bodies turn up, Alex and Milo begin to suspect that the real monster is very much at large. Like Kellerman's 12 previous Alex Delaware mysteries, Monster builds to a big, teeth-clenching bang and ends with some very satisfying surprises. --Barrie Trinkle --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

In top form in his latest mystery featuring L.A. forensic psychologist Alex Delaware (who had a bit part in the author's previous novel, Billy Straight), Kellerman devises a deviously twisted, contemporary tale that draws pulsing suspense from the ageless relationship between madness and evil. Delaware teams up with his pal Milo Sturgis, of LAPD Homicide, to track the murderer of Claire Argent, a young doctor who worked at Starkweather Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Argent's badly mutilated body connects her death to the unsolved murder of a young, aspiring actor whose body had been sawed in half. Kellerman masterfully strews the trail of the investigation with crumbs, challenging his heroes (and readers) to distinguish promising clues from red herrings. Argent, who recently left a prime research job to work at Starkweather, led an extremely isolated life that had nothing in common with that of the murdered actor. The Starkweather staff is reticent and unhelpful until a young aide reveals that the doctor had been spending time with an inmate known as the Monster, a mentally deficient man who had been convicted of murdering and mutilating a young family 15 years earlier. Kellerman focuses on Delaware and Sturgis as they probe the hospital's milieu, the Monster's crime, the doctor's troubled and puzzling history and additional murders. A tense climax in the hills above L.A. brings together all the tautly woven threads as Kellerman delivers another chilling look into the dark corners of the human psyche. Literary Guild, Doubleday Book Club and Mystery Guild main selections.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

132 Reviews
5 star:
 (24)
4 star:
 (32)
3 star:
 (32)
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (132 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
1.0 out of 5 stars Boooooo!, Oct 4 2006
*blows a huge rasberry* This book is crap. I just finished it and I couldn't be more disappointed. First, the book starts off very slow and elaborated on wayyyy too much detail. The suspense started to pick up in the middle and I became pretty optimistic for a big finish. I literally read the last page and flipped it over looking for more.

The book makes you invest in details that appear to matter at the outset. However, in the end they are never explained and the pieces of the mystery come together from nothing more than a character's opinion. The ending is predictable and unimaginative. I forced myself to endure a slow start expecting a big bang somewhere else. Now, I know I just wasted my time. Don't make the same mistake.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Plodding and unimaginative, Jun 11 2004
By A Customer
Not a good read. Have not read any other Kellerman but was not bothered by the absence of character development others have complained of. I could not stand, however, his decision to focus on the detail of certain events. One example, why dedicate so many plodding pages to a conversation with security guards at the end which contributed absolutely nothing to the resolution? There are other instances. Thankfully I picked this one up on the bargain table.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Is There a New Monster In Town?, Mar 28 2004
By Gorilla Milkman (Sacramento, California) - See all my reviews
One day, in the small town of Treadway, Ardis Peake ambled into the kitchen and calmly cut off his mother's head, then he went upstairs where the couple of the household lay asleep and brutally dispatched them as well. Not finished with his killing spree, he went down the hall to visit the children's room. The five-year-old girl was found without her eyes and, as for the baby boy, the police followed Ardis' bloody footprints out of the house to the shack where Ardis lay peacefully asleep. A pot was boiling away on the stove. The baby was in it.

They locked Ardis "Monster" Peake up in the Starkweather State Hospital for the Criminally Insane where he remained for fifteen years non-verbal, non-responsive, non-violent, probably because of his Thorazine diet. However on two different occasions he spoke, but only long enough to predict two violent deaths.

The doctors at the asylum swear there is no way Ardis could have gotten out. But Dr. Alex Delaware and Detective Milo Sturgis are certain there's a deadly link between Peake and the deaths, the murders are too similar. Is there a new monster? And if so is he somehow communicating with the old one?

The clues lead them back to Treadway where the Peake had gone on his rampage, but the trail is old and cold as the town is gone, in its place now, a retirement community. However, maybe that trail isn't quiet so cold as first thought, maybe there is a clue or two around, but can Alex and Milo figure them out before someone else is brutally murdered?

In "Monster" Alex and Milo are into one of their most gruesome cases yet, a case full of surprises, red herrings and lots of twists and turns. The book is fast-paced, tense, powerful and an excellent read.

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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Give me a break
As one implausible scene after another played out (OK they had their moments) I got the nasty feeling that the payoff would be weak and sure enough the ending fizzled like a wet... Read more
Published on Mar 3 2004 by bourlinguer

5.0 out of 5 stars This book is poorly judged.
This novel, I admit is a little disturbing, but it is very well thought out, and is poorly judged because of some of the gruling descriptions of some events, but I think it is... Read more
Published on Jan 23 2004 by hali

2.0 out of 5 stars Painfully laborious!
Picked up the audio version and struggled through it. Apart from the unimaginative redition, I found the content itself to be less than riveting - considerably so. Read more
Published on Jun 23 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Fast paced psychological thriller
In this murder mystery Dr. Alex Deleware is helping his friend Detective Milo determine who has killed a psychologist. Read more
Published on Feb 2 2003 by Tanya L. Schaub

4.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT novel by Kellerman....
This is one of Kellerman's best novels!!! His character, Ardis Peake, makes Hannibal Lecter look like a big baby! Read more
Published on Aug 23 2002 by Darren Jacks

3.0 out of 5 stars Just relax and read
The story of the book is a good one, but the book is not an easy reading book, the way that the movie maker takes out of jail a prisoner to do his last job is a little bit out of... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2002 by Jorge Frid

4.0 out of 5 stars If you like some gore of Psychology...
First off, I really like the main character of this book. This was the first Kellerman book I have ever read but after doing so, I would read another one with Dr. Delaware. Read more
Published on Jan 31 2002

2.0 out of 5 stars Not his best
This is not the best Kellerman book I have read. It is slow to get into and Milo and Alex are not as compelling in this novel.
Published on Jan 23 2002 by LIZ RAULS

2.0 out of 5 stars The well has run dry on this series.
I've been a fan of the Alex Delaware series since the beginning, having read each novel as they were published in paperback. Read more
Published on Oct 18 2001 by layback76

4.0 out of 5 stars First and hooked
I have recently read monster and loved it. It is the first book I have read by JK and am hooked. I have already gone out and bought other books in the series. Read more
Published on Sep 25 2001 by whoasam

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