Amazon.co.uk Review
Fleshmarket Close is not one of the best of Rankin's John Rebus thrillers, but his second-best is still more than excellent. Middle age is catching up with Rebus--he currently has no desk as a none-too-subtle hint from his superiors that he should seek retirement--but he and his friend and protegee Siobhan, who is still not his lover, race around investigating a variety of seemingly unconnected cases
The sister of a dead rape victim is missing; stolen medical skeletons turn up embedded in a concrete floor; a Kurdish journalist is brutally killed; the son of a Glasgow ganglord has moved in to the Edinburgh vice scene.
Much of the book is dominated by two new settings--a sink estate divided between racist thugs and refugees, and a small town whose economy is dominated by an internment camp for those about to be deported; this is one of Rankin's preachier thrillers, but it is never less than intelligent and evocative in its descriptions of a contemporary squalor that spreads beyond the inner city. These are never quite orthodox police procedurals--Rebus' method is a little too like the standard private eye's way of wandering around being rude to people until something comes loose--but they have a deep seriousness about the way we live now that transcends mere noir moodiness.--Roz Kaveney
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
Fleshmarket Close was featured in the new BBC bookclub programme hosted by Jeremy Vine - BBC PAGE TURNERS. The interview with Ian was broadcast on Monday 18 April on BBC1 at 9.15am. THE GUARDIAN have interviewed Ian for the Saturday Review. This is a major profile interview by Nick Wroe with photographs by Eamonn McCabe. This will run mid-May to tie in to Ian's talk at the Guardian Hay Festival. BBC RADIO WALES 'Phil the Shelf' are interviewing Ian at Hay. On 9 April FINANCIAL TIMES ran an profile interview with Ian for the Weekend Interview. This was done whilst Ian was touring the States. Fleshmarket Close was also winner of the 2005 British Book Award for Crime Thriller of the Year. The award was announced at the Nibbies on 20 April and broadcast on Channel 4 'RICHARD AND JUDY on 22 April. THE TIMES ran a diary story following the announcement of the shortlist and the Nibbies got widespread media coverage. Ian was awarded CWA DIAMOND DAGGER for Lifetime Achievement on Wednesday 11 May at the Savoy. Ian has written 100 words for GUARDIAN summer reading feature.
DAILY EXPRESS
'Gripping'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
DAILY MIRROR
'Rankin's 15th Edinburgh-based Rebus mystery shows he's as sharp and chilling as ever'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
WOMAN & HOME
'typically intelligent, complex and extremely gripping novel'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Book Description
The fifteenth Inspector Rebus novel from the SUNDAY TIMES No. 1 bestselling author.
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.
GOOD BOOK GUIDE
'Rankin has no equal when it comes to revealing human prejudices, fear and ignorance'
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Peter Guttridge, THE OBSERVER
'Rankin's best novel yet and that's saying something#'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
John Major, MAIL ON SUNDAY - Christmas Books
'As ever, Rankin is superb'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Joseph Farrell, TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
'Of the new breed of crime writers, no one writes more gripping stories than Rankin; his imagination peopls Edinburgh the way Balzac's fantasy did Paris. The scenes which emerge...are the product of a troubling imagination and a probing intellect which uses the crime genre to examine aspects of life, especially contemporary Scottish life, that politicians prefer to ignore'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
John Dugdale, SUNDAY TIMES
'Rankin at his best, recalling Dickens both in the vigour and ambition of their social portraiture and in their campaigning thrust'
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Description
An illegal immigrant is found murdered in an Edinburgh housing scheme: a racist attack, or something else entirely? Rebus is drawn into the case, but has other problems: his old police station has closed for business, and his masters would rather he retire than stick around. Siobhan meanwhile has problems of her own. A teenager has disappeared from home and Siobhan is drawn into helping the family, which will mean travelling closer than is healthy towards the web of a convicted rapist. Then there's the small matter of the two skeletons - a woman and an infant - found buried beneath a concrete cellar floor in Fleshmarket Close. The scene begins to look like an elaborate stunt - but whose, and for what purpose...?
About the Author
Ian Rankin was born in the Kingdom of Fife in 1960. In 1997 he was awarded the Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction for BLACK & BLUE. His subsequent Rebus novels have all been international bestsellers, and in 2003, he received an OBE for services to literature.