| Kindle Price: | $9.99 |
| Sold by: | Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc Price set by seller. |
Your Memberships & Subscriptions
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Blood Test (An Alex Delaware Book 2) Kindle Edition
Dr. Alexander Delaware, a child psychologist in Los Angeles, is called in to evaluate the case of a leukemia patient whose parents want to discontinue chemotherapy. When the boy disappears from the hospital and his parents are found dead, the only leads are the boy's sensual older sister and a holistic-meditative cult called The Touch. Delaware's search for the child takes him to a small town near the Mexican border where he finally unearths the dark secrets kept by the boy's family and the townspeople. He also uncovers drugs and group sex in the commune and survives a few harrowing attempts on his life. (Particularly well-drawn is a failed assassination at the tale's end, which has intriguing mythic echoes.)
As in his praised first novel, When the Bough Breaks, Kellerman draws on his experience as a clinical psychologist to enrich and broaden his considerable storytelling talents. Imbued with a vivid sense of place and featuring a strong supporting cast, including Milo Sturgis, Delaware's burly gay detective friend, this second adventure points happily toward an Alex Delaware series.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherScribner
- Publication dateJuly 6, 2010
- File size1094 KB
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From the Inside Flap
Alex sets out to convince Mr. and Mrs. Swope--only to find that the parents have left the hospital and taken their son with them. Worse, the sleazy motel room where the Swopes were staying is empty--except for the ominous bloodstain. The Swopes and their son have vanished into the sordid shadows of the city.
Now Alex and his friend, homocide detective Milo Sturgis, have no choice but to push the law to the breaking point. They've entered an amoral underworld where drugs, dreams, and sex are all for sale...where fantasies are fulfilled at any price--even at the cost of a young boy's life.
From the Paperback edition. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
From the Paperback edition. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Isat in the courtroom and watched Richard Moody get the bad news from the judge.
Moody’d come dressed for the occasion in a chocolate polyester suit, canary yellow shirt, string tie, and lizard skin boots. He grimaced and bit his lip and tried to lock eyes with the judge, but she outstared him and he ended up looking at his hands. The bailiff at the rear of the room held his gaze on Moody. As a result of my warning he’d been careful to keep the Moodys apart all afternoon and had gone so far as to frisk Richard.
The judge was Diane Severe, girlish for fifty, with ash blond hair and a strong, kind face; soft-spoken, and all business. I’d never been in her court but knew her reputation. She’d been a social worker before going to law school and after a decade in juvenile court and six years on the family bench was one of the few judges who really understood children.
“Mr. Moody,” she said, “I want you to listen very carefully to what I’m going to say.”
Moody started to assume an aggressive body posture, hunching his shoulders and narrowing his eyes like a bar fighter, but his attorney nudged him and he loosened up and forced a smile.
“I’ve heard testimony from Dr. Daschoff and Dr. Delaware, both eminently qualified as experts in this court. I’ve spoken to your children in my chambers. I’ve watched your behavior this afternoon and I’ve heard your allegations against Mrs. Moody. I’ve learned of your instructions to your children to run away from their mother so that you could rescue them.”
She paused and leaned forward.
“You’ve got serious emotional problems, sir.”
The smirk on Moody’s face vanished as quickly as it appeared, but she caught it.
“I’m sorry you think this is funny, Mr. Moody, because it’s tragic.”
“Your Honor,” Moody’s lawyer interjected.
She cut him off with the flick of a gold pen.
“Not now, Mr. Durkin. I’ve heard quite enough wordplay today. This is the bottom line and I want your client to pay attention.”
Turning back to Moody:
“Your problems may be treatable. I sincerely hope they are. There’s no doubt in my mind that psychotherapy is essential—a good deal of it. Medication may be called for as well. For your sake and the sake of your children I hope you get whatever treatment you need. My order is that you have no further contact with your children until I see psychiatric evidence that you are no longer a threat to yourself or to others—when the death threats and talk of suicide cease, and you have accepted the reality of this divorce and are able to support Mrs. Moody in the raising of the children.
“Should you get to that point—and your word won’t be sufficient to convince me, Mr. Moody—the court will call upon Dr. Delaware to set up a schedule of limited and monitored visitation.”
Moody took it in, then made a sudden move forward. The bailiff was out of his chair and at his side in a flash. Moody saw him, gave a sick grin, and let his body go slack. The tears flowed down his cheeks. Durkin pulled out a handkerchief, gave it to him, and raised an objection concerning the judge’s encroachment upon his client’s privacy.
“You’re free to appeal, Mr. Durkin,” she said evenly.
“Judge.”
It was Moody talking now, the bass voice dry and strained.
“What is it, Mr. Moody?”
“You don’t unnerstand.” He wrung his hands. “Those kids, they’re my life.”
For a moment I thought she was going to tongue-lash him. Instead she regarded him with compassion.
“I do understand, sir. I understand that you love your children. That your life is in shambles. But what you need to understand—the whole point of the psychiatric testimony—is that children can’t be responsible for anyone’s life. That’s too big a burden for any child to bear. They can’t raise you, Mr. Moody. You need to be able to raise them. And right now you can’t. You need help.”
Moody started to say something but choked it back. He shook his head in defeat, gave the handkerchief back to Durkin, and tried to salvage a few shards of dignity.
The next quarter hour was spent on property settlement. I had no need to listen to the distribution of the meager estate of Darlene and Richard Moody and would have left, but Mal Worthy had said he wanted to talk to me afterward.
When the legal mumbling was over, Judge Severe took off her glasses and ended the hearing. She looked my way and smiled.
“I’d like to see you in chambers for a moment if you’ve got the time, Dr. Delaware.”
I smiled back and nodded. She swept out of the courtroom.
Durkin ushered Moody out under the watchful eye of the bailiff.
At the next table Mal was pep-talking Darlene, patting her plump shoulder as he scooped up handfuls of documents and stashed them in one of the two suitcases he’d brought. Mal was compulsive and while other lawyers made do with an attaché case, he carted around boxes of documents on a chromium luggage rack.
The former Mrs. Richard Moody looked up at him, bewildered, cheeks feverishly rosy, bobbing her head in assent. She’d stuffed her milkmaid’s body into a light blue summer dress as frothy as high tide. The dress was ten years too young for her and I wondered if she’d confused newfound freedom with innocence.
Mal was decked out in classic Beverly Hills attorney mufti: Italian suit, silk shirt and tie, calfskin loafers with tassels. His hair was styled fashionably long and curly, his beard cut close to the skin. He had glossy nails and perfect teeth and a Malibu tan. When he saw me he winked and waved and gave Darlene one last pat. Then he held her hand in both of his and saw her to the door.
“Thanks for your help, Alex,” he said when he came back. Piles of papers remained on the table and he busied himself with packing them.
“It wasn’t fun,” I said.
“No. The ugly ones aren’t.” He meant it but there was a lilt in his voice.
“But you won.”
He stopped shuffling papers for a moment. “Yeah. Well, you know, that’s the business I’m in. Jousting.” He flipped his wrist and looked at a wafer-thin disc of gold. “I won’t say it pains me to dispose of a turkey like Mr. M.”
“You think he’ll take it? Just like that?”
He shrugged.
“Who knows? If he doesn’t we’ll just keep bringing in the heavy artillery.”
At two hundred dollars an hour.
He lashed the suitcases to the rack.
“Hey listen, Alex, this wasn’t a stinker. For those I don’t call you—I’ve got hired guns up the wazoo. This was righteous, no?”
“We were on the right side.”
“Precissimoso. And I thank you again. Regards to the lady judge.”
“What do you think she wants?” I asked.
He grinned and slapped me on the back.
“Maybe she likes your style. Not a bad looking gal, heh? She’s single, you know?”
“Spinster?”
“Hell, no. Divorced. I handled her case.”
Her chambers were done in mahogany and rose, and permeated with the scent of flowers. She sat behind a glass-topped, carved wood desk upon which stood a cut-crystal vase filled with stalks of gladiolus. On the wall behind the desk were several photographs of two hulking blond teenage boys—in football jerseys, wetsuits, and evening wear.
“My gruesome twosome,” she said, following my eyes. “One’s at Stanford, the other’s selling firewood up at Arrowhead. No telling, eh, Doctor?”
“No telling.”
“Please have a seat.” She motioned me to a velvet sofa. When I’d settled she said, “Sorry if I was a little rough on you in there.”
“No problem.”
“I wanted to know if the fact that Mr. Moody wears women’s underwear was relevant to his mental status, and you refused to be pinned down.”
“I didn’t think his choice of lingerie had much to do with custody.”
She laughed. “I get two types of psych experts. The puffed-up, self-proclaimed authorities, so taken with themselves they think their opinions on any topic are sacrosanct, and the cautious ones, like you, who won’t give an opinion unless it’s backed up by a double-blind, controlled study.”
I shrugged. “At least you won’t get a Twinkie Defense out of me.”
“Touché. How about some wine?” She unlatched the doors of a credenza carved to match the desk and took out a bottle and two long-stemmed glasses.
“My pleasure, Your Honor.”
“In here, Diane. Is it Alexander?”
“Alex is fine.”
She poured red wine into the glasses. “This is a very fine cabernet that I save for the termination of particularly obnoxious cases. Positive reinforcement, if you will.”
I took the glass she offered.
“To justice,” she said, and we sipped. It was good wine and I told her so. It seemed to please her.
We drank in silence. She finished before I did and set down her glass.
“I want to talk to you about the Moodys. They’re off my docket but I can’t help thinking about the kids. I read your report and you have good insights on the family.”
“It took a while but they opened up.”
“Alex, are those children going to be all right?”
“I’ve asked... --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
From the Publisher
Alex sets out to convince Mr. and Mrs. Swope--only to find that the parents have left the hospital and taken their son with them. Worse, the sleazy motel room where the Swopes were staying is empty--except for the ominous bloodstain. The Swopes and their son have vanished into the sordid shadows of the city.
Now Alex and his friend, homocide detective Milo Sturgis, have no choice but to push the law to the breaking point. They've entered an amoral underworld where drugs, dreams, and sex are all for sale...where fantasies are fulfilled at any price--even at the cost of a young boy's life.
A suspenseful thriller whose solution lies in the darker recesses of the human soul." -- The Wall Street Journal
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.From the Back Cover
Product details
- ASIN : B003VPWYA0
- Publisher : Scribner; 1st edition (July 6, 2010)
- Publication date : July 6, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 1094 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 386 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #48,788 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,696 in Crime Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- #2,819 in Suspense (Kindle Store)
- #3,005 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jonathan Kellerman is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of more than three dozen bestselling crime novels, including the Alex Delaware series, The Butcher’s Theater, Billy Straight, The Conspiracy Club, Twisted, True Detectives, and The Murderer’s Daughter. With his wife, bestselling novelist Faye Kellerman, he co-authored Double Homicide and Capital Crimes. With his son, bestselling novelist Jesse Kellerman, he co-authored The Golem of Hollywood and The Golem of Paris. He is also the author of two children’s books and numerous nonfiction works, including Savage Spawn: Reflections on Violent Children and With Strings Attached: The Art and Beauty of Vintage Guitars. He has won the Goldwyn, Edgar, and Anthony awards and has been nominated for a Shamus Award. Jonathan and Faye Kellerman live in California, New Mexico, and New York.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
I enjoy the series a lot and look forward to seeing Milo move into a more central role since in the later books the two of them are nearly inseparable and their partnership does make plots work better than when Alex is taking so much action on his own.
This novel sees Delaware and Sturgis in their 30's. It takes place before the technology of cell phones and Internet searches were prevalent. The story centers on the case of a young boy that has a form of treatable cancer who is removed from treatment, presumably by his parents, and disappears. The parents are found dead, and the boy is not found until Dr. Delaware begins snooping around a mysterious California cult that is a cover for much more elicit activities. The plot twists showed signs of Kellerman's later work, but were somewhat predictable in this early work. In addition, the profanity, violence, and sex in these books was a bit more in-your-face than his more recent novels. Like all of us, and perhaps Kellerman himself, his characters have mellowed with age.
It was an enjoyable read.
Examples: Chapter 4
"A black boy around seventeen was sprawled atop the covers...[music] screamed from the ghetto blaster on his nightstand"
"She called for help and a tiny Filipino nurse appeared..."
Chapter 5
"The gangly black boy watched the confrontation..."
"The Filipino nurse was there, charting..."
"...bespectacled Iranian with the numb demeanor of a habitual opium smoker..."
"The Iranian raised his eyes from his reading and blinked."
"...who progressed to muttering to himself in Farsi, no doubt reminiscing about the good old days with the Ayatollah."
Chapter 7
"A tall well-built Jamaican....started to say something hostile, but Milo shoved his badge in the mahogany face..."
"What can I do for you, Officers? asked the black..."
"Taken by surprise, the Jamaican stepped back..."
Chapter 9
"...the Iranian clerk"
10
" A tall Mexican man wearing a hair net and blue scrubs ran a dry mop over the floor"
14
"Del told me about the Cuban...seems your friend is a hothead."
"Once we've sure the Saudi's off the streets..."
"...pay close attention to Shitpants, he'll weasel out and be back in Riyadh before we know it."
and the unnecessary racially charged descriptions go on: " the black detective, an elderly black guard, especially the Cuban, the Hispanic Officer..."
As I was reading I kept wondering what world the author lived in that he saw people of different races so infrequently that he felt the need to describe the racial difference each and every time someone was not white. Again, the majority of the white characters received no racial description but instead just normal descriptions like : "the tired looking bellman" "the judge"...or they even got names!
Top reviews from other countries
精神を病んでいて誰にも助けられない人々を、心温かく救おうと努力する。
また、探偵まがいのことも命を懸けて、悪の罪悪を暴こうと必死になる。
この主人公には、作者のJonathan Kellermanにも、感服します。
いままでに、彼の著書は、これを含めて原書で6冊読んでいますが、
かなり、精神心理学の専門用語がでてくるので、英和辞典を引くのに、難儀します。
私は、Ross Macdonaldの全著書25冊を最近あらためて全部読みましたが、
それと較べるとJonathan Kellermanの本は、ストーリーも複雑でJargon(専門用語)も
多くて、ちょっと辛いです。それにドクターですから、プライドも少し高いみたい。
でも、すばらしい本を書いていると思います。皆さんも是非トライしてください。
Such was my enjoyment of Kellerman's first Alex Delaware thriller that I felt I had to have a look at the second in the series. Dr Alex Delaware is a Psychologist specialising in matters that impact on children.
Delaware is asked by a Senior Oncologist at a local hospital to liaise with the parents of a child suffering from cancer. There are fears that the parents may stop their son's treatment because of pressure from external holistic medicine practitioners.
However the child is kidnapped before Delaware can do anything and the family disappears. However shortly afterwards the parents bodies are discovered having been brutally murdered. In addition Delaware is threatened by the father of two children following a court decision that prevents the father having access to his children. Are the two matters connected?
Delaware's enquiries bring him into contact with a reclusive cult, officious sheriff and a driven doctor all of whom have their own agenda to follow. In the meantime can he discover the whereabouts of the child with cancer before it is too late?
An excellent follow-up to Kellerman's original book. The character of Alex Delaware continues to develop under the hand of a master storyteller and makes me think that it will not be to long before I have a look at the third in the series.






























