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Private Eyes

Private Eyes

List Price: $14.99
Your Price: $10.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Silly Premise
Review: After eight different tries with Kellerman, I removed him from my "authors to read" list. Then a friend gave me Private Eyes and I thought I'd give him another shot. 525 pages later, I haven't changed my mind. Private Eyes is extremely slow going, and if not for my need to finish every book I start, I would have gladly given the book back without reaching the very disappointing ending.

Alex Delaware is called by a former child patient after nine years. He is drawn into a severly dysfunctional family with secrets galore, a missing person, her former attacker now free from prison, greedy bankers and lawyers, odd-ball psychiatrists - all of whom could be guilty of the possible kidnapping/murder...if there was actually a kidnapping/murder. With his loyal minion Milo Sturgis, Delaware tries to untangle the intricate web Kellerman weaves for the reader. Great premise.

Unfortunately, what I found was more of Kellerman's verbose writing style in which he goes to great length to describe the highways and byways that Delaware takes to go to wherever he's going. I realize in reading other reviews, many readers enjoy Kellerman. Beyond Billy Straight and Survival of the Fittest, I can't say I'm in that same group of fans.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: These eyes need Visine...
Review: After eight different tries with Kellerman, I removed him from my "authors to read" list. Then a friend gave me Private Eyes and I thought I'd give him another shot. 525 pages later, I haven't changed my mind. Private Eyes is extremely slow going, and if not for my need to finish every book I start, I would have gladly given the book back without reaching the very disappointing ending.

Alex Delaware is called by a former child patient after nine years. He is drawn into a severly dysfunctional family with secrets galore, a missing person, her former attacker now free from prison, greedy bankers and lawyers, odd-ball psychiatrists - all of whom could be guilty of the possible kidnapping/murder...if there was actually a kidnapping/murder. With his loyal minion Milo Sturgis, Delaware tries to untangle the intricate web Kellerman weaves for the reader. Great premise.

Unfortunately, what I found was more of Kellerman's verbose writing style in which he goes to great length to describe the highways and byways that Delaware takes to go to wherever he's going. I realize in reading other reviews, many readers enjoy Kellerman. Beyond Billy Straight and Survival of the Fittest, I can't say I'm in that same group of fans.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good character development
Review: I liked this book a lot. It had a good amount of relationship issues in here and I enjoy that. I found it interesting to see the relationship between the mother and daughter change and to see the daughter make sense of her mother. Alex Deleware is a great character. Jonathan Kellerman has kicked out another good book! You easily get caught up in the characters lives. Kellerman draws you in. I could barely wait to find out what happens in the next chapter!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good character development
Review: I liked this book a lot. It had a good amount of relationship issues in here and I enjoy that. I found it interesting to see the relationship between the mother and daughter change and to see the daughter make sense of her mother. Alex Deleware is a great character. Jonathan Kellerman has kicked out another good book! You easily get caught up in the characters lives. Kellerman draws you in. I could barely wait to find out what happens in the next chapter!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Couldn't put it down..hoping it would get better
Review: I read the "hype" on the book jacket and thought that this book would eventually get better. It didn't. Three quarters of the book draged on and on. Finally the action picked up at the end but I really didn't care at that point. Perhaps if I were into psychiatry I would have found this book more interesting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Admittedly slow for a while, but builds
Review: I think you have to be a fan of Kellerman to really enjoy this one. I have read several other Alex Delaware novels and know that the stories are generally pretty solid. This book does start off slow, and I even admit to putting it down and reading another couple of books, before I picked it back up again. What made me pick it back up, you may ask. As I said I had read other Delaware books, and knew that there was more than likely an interesting story behind the slow startup. I feel it was worth it to pick the book up again and the story slowly but surely developed into an interesting tale and felt rewarded for continuing on. What makes the book slow is the fact that it does not start with a bang as many mysteries do that keep you captivated for a while. You can read an overall description above, so there is no need for me to repeat it here, but I can say that the beginning of the book spends time on developing the characters and the background of the story. Maybe not so riveting at first but it does begin to draw you in, and it makes the story more believable.

In brief, I would say that if you are a Jonathan Kellerman fan then get this book and don't be disheartened by a slow start. You'll get what you like out of his books in the end. If you have not read Kellerman before then you might want to try another one of the Alex Delaware's books that moves at a faster pace, and gets you from the start. I recommend "Time Bomb" and "Bad Love" if you haven't read Kellerman before. They get you from the start and if you like those then you should give "Private Eyes" a try.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Admittedly slow for a while, but builds
Review: I think you have to be a fan of Kellerman to really enjoy this one. I have read several other Alex Delaware novels and know that the stories are generally pretty solid. This book does start off slow, and I even admit to putting it down and reading another couple of books, before I picked it back up again. What made me pick it back up, you may ask. As I said I had read other Delaware books, and knew that there was more than likely an interesting story behind the slow startup. I feel it was worth it to pick the book up again and the story slowly but surely developed into an interesting tale and felt rewarded for continuing on. What makes the book slow is the fact that it does not start with a bang as many mysteries do that keep you captivated for a while. You can read an overall description above, so there is no need for me to repeat it here, but I can say that the beginning of the book spends time on developing the characters and the background of the story. Maybe not so riveting at first but it does begin to draw you in, and it makes the story more believable.

In brief, I would say that if you are a Jonathan Kellerman fan then get this book and don't be disheartened by a slow start. You'll get what you like out of his books in the end. If you have not read Kellerman before then you might want to try another one of the Alex Delaware's books that moves at a faster pace, and gets you from the start. I recommend "Time Bomb" and "Bad Love" if you haven't read Kellerman before. They get you from the start and if you like those then you should give "Private Eyes" a try.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fresh life into the series
Review: Nine years ago, Alex Delaware successfully treated Melissa Dickinson, a tormented and phobic young girl, irrationally scared of almost everything. After two years of treatment, Melissa seems almost totally recovered, so her need for Dr Delaware ceases, and she becomes one of his most spectacular triumphs. Now, Melissa contacts Alex again, this time seeking advice concerning her mother. Gina Dickinson is a recluse, an ex-actress hiding away from the world ever since a vicious acid attack that left her scarred for life, even after extensive and traumatic plastic surgery. Even though Gina is now seeing, with some effect, a psychiatrist of her own, Melissa wants to know if Alex feels her mother could cope if she went away, accepting her place Harvard. Then, one day, Gina inexplicably climbs into her car, and drives off into thin air, leaving a tangled mystery to be unravelled in her wake.

I had started to think that this series was in danger of going stale. The prose is adequate and easy to read, but hardly full of spirit and at times seems a little perfunctory, and Alex Delaware has also remained a rather static - if very likeable - character. But now, after reading Kellerman's excellent standalone "The Butcher's Theatre", I returned to the series with "Private Eyes", and found it a wonderfully invigorating experience. This may be his lone of his longest Delaware books to date, but every word is fascinating, and there seems to me to be fresh fire in the writing. The characters are all very well developed, and although Kellerman never really takes any risks with his well-structured plot, it's a complex and clever book that really kicks the brain into gear, and presents one or two nice surprises along the way.

The psychology is dead-on, the relationships are all fascinating, the characterisation is acute, and the resolution is exciting, well-done, and satisfying. This may well turn out to be the rock of the Delaware series. To find out, i shall have to read on...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A new meaning to the phrase "private eyes"
Review: Private Eyes was the second book of the Delaware series I read. I thought it started out a little slower then the first book I read (bad love) but it kept me reading. It makes a person realize how much children can know with out an adult realizing it. I enjoyed the book but I was a little dissapointed with the ending. I have realized after reading 4 of the Delaware books, that Kellerman writes in a gradual slope and really catches the reader at the top of the hill and gradually leads them down the other side of the hill, breathless. I thought it was one of Kellerman's easier books to read with the technical lingo. Be prepared to loose sleep getting this one read! It is a non-stop read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Read
Review: This books is a great read, it is a wonderful mistery novel that keeps you reading. I have not yet read any Kellerman book that I did not feel this way about.


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