The theory of death : a Decker/Lazarus novel
(Book)
D KELLE
1 available
Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Central - Adult Detective | D KELLE | Available |
Description
Now living in upstate New York, former LAPD lieutenant Peter Decker is plunged into a bizarre web involving academia, underworld crime, and calculating killers in this compulsive novel in New York Times bestselling author Faye Kellerman's beloved Decker and Lazarus series.
Former LAPD lieutenant Peter Decker is relishing the quiet and slow pace of his new job with the Greenbury police department. The work is low stress and engaging, and it’s been almost a year since the last murder in this sleepy upstate New York town.
Then the body of a nude man is found deep within the woods, shattering Decker’s peace. The death appears to be a suicide—a single shot to the head, the gun by his side. But until the coroner’s ruling, the scene must be treated as a suspicious crime. Without any personal effects near the body, Decker must dig to uncover his identity, a task made difficult by the department’s tight budget and limited personnel. Luckily, Decker gets some unexpected help when his friend and former Greenbury colleague Tyler McAdams calls, looking for a quiet place to study for his law finals.
The investigation takes Decker and McAdams to Kneed Loft College, where they must penetrate the indecipherable upper echelons of mathematics and mathematical prodigies. Beneath the school’s rarified atmosphere they discover a sphere of scheming academics, hidden cyphers—and most dangerous of all—a realm of underworld crime that transforms harmless nerds into cold, calculating evil geniuses. It will take all of Decker’s experience and McAdams’s brains to penetrate enigmatic formulas and codes and solve a dark, twisted crime devised by some brilliant and depraved masterminds.
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
Former L.A. detective Peter Decker is living and working as police chief in Greenbury, a small town in upstate New York, where a college student, Eli Wolf, is found dead in the forest, an apparent suicide. Decker investigates with the help of visiting Harvard law student Tyler McAdams (introduced in Murder 101, 2014), who is staying with Peter and his wife, Rina Lazarus, ostensibly to study for his final exams without distraction, but the distractions mount as the investigation continues. Wolf was Mennonite and estranged from his father. He'd been in a bad car accident several years earlier, resulting in a form of brain damage that left him obsessed with math. Wolf's one social connection was to another math student, who had a crush on him since they were teenagers, but that doesn't leave her out as suspect. Fans of Kellerman's long-running series may find that this installment has too much math and not enough Rina, slowing down the story considerably. Still, it's a necessary purchase for libraries collecting the full series, and, of course, it's a natural for math-loving mystery readers.--Alesi, Stacy Copyright 2015 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in Greenbury, N.Y., bestseller Kellerman's plodding 23rd mystery featuring Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus (after 2014's Murder 101) opens with the discovery in a forest of the corpse of college student Eli Wolf, who apparently shot himself. Decker, who now works for the Greenbury PD after recently retiring from the LAPD, investigates. Meanwhile, Tyler McAdams, who left Greenbury PD for Harvard Law School, returns home to study for his exams. Tyler tags along as Decker tries to determine why Eli, who comes from Mennonite stock and was a gifted mathematician, would have committed suicide. When one of Eli's classmates turns out to be a woman who has had a crush on Tyler for years, she can't be ruled out as a suspect in what develops into a murder case. Series fans will be pleased to see that the relationship between Decker and Lazarus, neither of whom has any flaws, remains as affectionate as ever. New readers should be prepared for plenty of schmaltz. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Book Review
Detective Peter Decker welcomes his insufferable former colleague Tyler McAdams, shot at the end of Murder 101 (2014), back to the Greenbury, New York, police force with open arms and violent death. McAdams, who's supposed to be studying for his exams at Harvard Law School, says he wants to stay with Decker and his wife, Rina, for peace and quiet and a chance to hit the books without distractions. Distractions promptly arise when Kneed Loft College senior Eli Wolf is found shot to death, his clothes piled neatly next to him, in a snowy field. A car accident six years ago that killed the friend who was driving and broke his brother Jacob's leg scrambled Eli's brain. Born into a Mennonite family whose rapport with each other is laconic even when they're most demonstrative, he's been drifting further into the world of theoretical mathematics and away from everything else. Now that Decker must question Jacob, Eli's closemouthed parents, and his even more socially challenged mentors and friends at Kneed Loft, McAdams is eager to get in on the actionif that's what you want to call the brightly didactic passages explaining Fourier transforms and stochastic oscillators that take the place of Rina Decker's customary disquisitions on Jewish rituals. Fueled by the discovery of some incomprehensible papers Eli hid in his dorm room, Decker and McAdams talk to the boy's sort-of friend Mallon Euler, who turns out to have quite a crush on McAdams; Dr. Theo Rosser, Eli's megalomaniac adviser; and paranoid Dr. Katrina Belfort, who lacks the tenure that would presumably suck her last remaining humanity from her. The discovery of a second corpse sharpens the urgency of their inquiries but does nothing to focus them, until eventually one of their several theories of the case, no more or less interesting than the others, hits home. Move this one to the top of your list if you still pine for linear algebra. The unenlightened may want to wait and see what's on offer next term. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
Former L.A. detective Peter Decker is living and working as police chief in Greenbury, a small town in upstate New York, where a college student, Eli Wolf, is found dead in the forest, an apparent suicide. Decker investigates with the help of visiting Harvard law student Tyler McAdams (introduced in Murder 101, 2014), who is staying with Peter and his wife, Rina Lazarus, ostensibly to study for his final exams without distraction, but the distractions mount as the investigation continues. Wolf was Mennonite and estranged from his father. He'd been in a bad car accident several years earlier, resulting in a form of brain damage that left him obsessed with math. Wolf's one social connection was to another math student, who had a crush on him since they were teenagers, but that doesn't leave her out as suspect. Fans of Kellerman's long-running series may find that this installment has too much math and not enough Rina, slowing down the story considerably. Still, it's a necessary purchase for libraries collecting the full series, and, of course, it's a natural for math-loving mystery readers. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
You'd think former LAPD lieutenant Peter Decker could relax a little in small-town Greenbury, NY, where he heads the police department. But, no, a naked corpse has been discovered in the woods. Tracing the victim to nearby Kneed Loft College with the help of friend and former Greenbury colleague Tyler McAdams, Decker discovers a bunch of nerdy math types-turned-evil geniuses.
[Page 53]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Reviews
Set in Greenbury, N.Y., bestseller Kellerman's plodding 23rd mystery featuring Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus (after 2014's Murder 101) opens with the discovery in a forest of the corpse of college student Eli Wolf, who apparently shot himself. Decker, who now works for the Greenbury PD after recently retiring from the LAPD, investigates. Meanwhile, Tyler McAdams, who left Greenbury PD for Harvard Law School, returns home to study for his exams. Tyler tags along as Decker tries to determine why Eli, who comes from Mennonite stock and was a gifted mathematician, would have committed suicide. When one of Eli's classmates turns out to be a woman who has had a crush on Tyler for years, she can't be ruled out as a suspect in what develops into a murder case. Series fans will be pleased to see that the relationship between Decker and Lazarus, neither of whom has any flaws, remains as affectionate as ever. New readers should be prepared for plenty of schmaltz. (Oct.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2015 PWxyz LLCReviews from GoodReads
Citations
Kellerman, F. (2015). The theory of death: a Decker/Lazarus novel (First edition.). William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Kellerman, Faye. 2015. The Theory of Death: A Decker/Lazarus Novel. New York, NY: William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Kellerman, Faye. The Theory of Death: A Decker/Lazarus Novel New York, NY: William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2015.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Kellerman, F. (2015). The theory of death: a decker/lazarus novel. First edn. New York, NY: William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Kellerman, Faye. The Theory of Death: A Decker/Lazarus Novel First edition., William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2015.