Euthanasia or murder? In this gripping and extraordinary thriller, psychologist Alex Delaware must battle even himself to resolve this complex case.
Euthanasia or murder? In this gripping and extraordinary thriller, psychologist Alex Delaware must battle even himself to resolve this complex case.
Euthanasia or murder? In this gripping and extraordinary thriller, psychologist Alex Delaware must battle even himself to resolve this complex case.
Euthanasia or murder? In this gripping and extraordinary thriller, psychologist Alex Delaware must battle even himself to resolve this complex case.
People are voluntarily dying before their time in California. Some call it assisted suicide when cancer, heart disease or painful old age make the quality of life unbearable. Others say it is murder, that no-one has the right to help others take their own life.
As the debate rages over whether euthanasia should be legalised or not, the man at the centre of the row, nicknamed Doctor Death, continues his work. Dr Alex Delaware joins in the argument, but when Detective Milo Sturgis comes to him with the suspicion that some of Doctor Death's patients are not willing collaborators, Delaware finds himself on the frontline of the affair, and increasingly believes that euthanasia is not the prime motivation. So what is driving Doctor Death to kill so many?“Strong insights into the quirks of human and criminal behaviour”
- Guardian
Filled with insight - Stephen KingCoolly intelligent - GQA sense of humanity and justice - Publishers WeeklyAn alert eye for detail - New York TimesAfter a distinguished career in child psychology, Jonathan Kellerman turned to writing full-time, and there are now over thirty million copies of his novels in print. He is also the author of two volumes of psychology. He lives in Southern California with his wife, the novelist Faye Kellerman, and their four children.
People are voluntarily dying before their time in California. Some call it assisted suicide when cancer, heart disease or painful old age make the quality of life unbearable. Others say it is murder, that no-one has the right to help others take their own life. As the debate rages over whether euthanasia should be legalised or not, the man at the centre of the row, nicknamed Doctor Death, continues his work. Dr Alex Delaware joins in the argument, but when Detective Milo Sturgis comes to him with the suspicion that some of Doctor Death's patients are not willing collaborators, Delaware finds himself on the frontline of the affair, and increasingly believes that euthanasia is not the prime motivation. So what is driving Doctor Death to kill so many?
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