The Ghost Orchid is the 39th Alex Delaware procedural mystery by Jonathan Kellerman. Released 6th Feb 2023 by Penguin Random House on their Ballantine imprint, it's 304 pages and is available in hardcover, audio, and ebook formats. Large print paperback due out from the same publisher 22nd Feb 2024. It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links and references throughout.
This
has been such a solid and dependable very long-running
series. The returning
characters are so well defined at this point, with so much background
written in, that they really seem to live and breathe. Dr. Delaware
himself is always insightful and the "odd couple" aspects of his
relationship with Detective Milo Sturgis are fun and engaging. The
series has delivered solidly since 1985 which is stupendous, and that
the author continues to deliver without feeling too formulaic or "phoned
in" is unbelievably wonderful.
This
is a modern procedural and, as in the other books, the descriptions and
themes can be graphic. There are aspects of aberrant psychology or
behavior and themes which may be upsetting for some readers. The mystery
itself is clever, twisty, and super well constructed. Alex Delaware is called in by Milo to try and
untangle the otherwise hidden psychological aspects, and as always, his observations are
vital to the solving of the case.
The mystery itself and all necessary back-story are written in, so it works quite well as a standalone. The whole series is highly recommended, but readers who are new to the characters won't have any trouble keeping up. Itwould make a superlative buddy/binge/summer vacation read, or a year long project for a mystery book club. Highly successful, it's already on public library acquisition lists, but if not, it's a must read.
The unabridged audiobook version has a run time of 10 hours 7 minutes and is capably narrated by long time series narrator John
Rubinstein. Mr. Rubinstein does a superb job juggling the different
characters and his baritone voice manages to go from adenoidal whiny to
gravelly and hard-boiled (Milo) without a single hiccup. Sound and
production quality are very high throughout the read.
Four and a half stars. A solid mystery in a very solid, very long-running series.
Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.
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