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The Rottweiler
 
 

The Rottweiler (Hardcover)

by Ruth Rendell (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 342 pages
  • Publisher: Hutchinson; ... edition (2 Oct 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0091799465
  • ISBN-13: 978-0091799465
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 16.2 x 3.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 517,430 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #100 in  Books > Crime, Thrillers & Mystery > Authors, A-Z > R > Rendell, Ruth

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Ruth Rendell's The Rottweiler centres on a small group of Londoners, one of whom is, as it happens, a serial killer. There is never any particular mystery to the omniscient narrator, or the reader listening to her, as to who the killer is--the questions at stake are: who is going to fall under suspicion, whether the killer will be caught and why on earth the killer has this periodic urge to garotte a variety of women and steal an item of jewellery from them.

We spend a lot of time with some interesting flawed people--Inez, the widow obsessed with her late actor husband, in whose junk shop the killer occasionally dumps clues; Will, the beautiful stupid boy whose aunt is torn about the prospect of a life spent looking after him; Zeinab, the young woman who may or may not have a violently jealous father and certainly has too many fiancées. We see these people through their own indulgent eyes and through the more jaundiced, but hardly more accurate eyes of killer and investigating police--Rendell is intelligent about self-deception and inner lives and the way we construct parts of our own identity through self-interested disapproval of others. --Roz Kaveney



Review

You either like Ruth Rendell's style or you don't. Eminently British and immensely popular her books are, however, subtly very clever indeed. What first appears as slightly plodding is suddenly, by a seemingly chance sentence, escalated into the realms of the best of British crime writing. "The Rottweiler" is a prime example. Slow to start, its pace quickly gathers, subplots and even sub-subplots swirling around the main crime, misting the mind and muddying the waters before becoming clear as daylight in an unbelievably neat and clever conclusion. Revolving around the owner of a London antique shop and her tenants in the flats above, the daily discussions amongst this disparate collection of humankind is the "Rottweiler", a man killing young girls and taking a keepsake after death. When one such keepsake is discovered in the shop, the police are faced with the all too real possibility of the killer being very nearby. Using her usual psychological proficiency, the cast are expertly depicted as possible suspects or victims, no detail too small or insignificant to mention. And when the subplots start the pace quickens anew. A must for all Rendell fans. - Lucy Watson

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Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
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 (6)
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 (4)
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 (1)
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 (4)
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Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
28 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the best writer at work today, anywhere., 5 Aug 2003
By RachelWalker "RachelW" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Ruth Rendell here again visits London, the place she is so able to render darkly atmospheric and menacing. There is a serial killer on the loose, and he has been dubbed “The Rottweiler” by the media, due to a bite mark found on the first victims neck, even though that bite mark was later traced back to her boyfriend. His only signature is that he takes one of each victims’ personal items – perhaps a watch, or necklace – after having garrotted them.

The latest victim is found near Inez Ferry’s antique shop, and because of this the lives of a small group of disparate people will become drawn into this case and it’s increasingly introverted investigation. For the police are becoming more and more convinced that someone connected to the shop – anyone from the exotic assistant Zeinab to one of the tenants in the flats above – could very well be a homicidal maniac...

This is everything that I expect a Ruth Rendell novel to be. It is, of course, impeccably written and psychologically excellent, so I need say no more about that. Her characters are also particularly noteworthy, especially the compelling Inez and Will, who is possibly the most moving character she has ever depicted.. You would easily be forgiven for thinking that this is a serial killer novel, but this is really no more a serial killer novel than the Bible is a book solely about God. It is so much more than that. It’s a book about the people involved, how they can be draw into darkness and uncertainty through the effects of the gravity of crime. It’s a book about how peoples live always changed when confronted with the horrific. At times, the serial killings themselves seem very on the periphery (I was going to say “incidental” that that would be entirely the wrong word) and it is eerie to read about them in such a detached way. It’s also interesting how we, essentially, only know as much about the murders as the characters themselves do through their exposure to the media.

To be honest, it’s almost impossible to review a Ruth Rendell book and truly convince of her genius and say what you really want to without illustrating it by disclosing important aspects of the plot or simply re-telling little aspects of the story, which makes the task I have very hard. But, rest assured, this book of a contemporary and chilling London and a small group of people within it is brilliant. It’s a novel that questions, among many things, the nature of morality, how we perceive others and ourselves, and it tackles, as many of her books do on some level, the problem of “How eccentric or odd do you have to be before you become a danger to others, or even yourself?” And yet, it is really about none of those things. Those are just tiny stitches in her tapestry, small but illuminating strokes on her canvas. It’s about people, and the spider-web of life that connects everything to everything else. And I consider it to be brilliance in its purest form. The only way to understand this is to read one of her works, because there is no one else today writing books quite like this. She’s our modern Scheherezade. I just want her to keep telling stories all night long.

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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I - HEART - Ruth Rendell, 11 Mar 2004
By RachelWalker "RachelW" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Rottweiler (Paperback)
Ruth Rendell here again visits London, the place she is so able to render darkly atmospheric and menacing. There is a serial killer on the loose, and he has been dubbed "The Rottweiler" by the media, due to a bite mark found on the first victim's neck, even though that bite mark was later traced back to her boyfriend. His only signature is that he takes one of each victims' personal items - perhaps a watch, or necklace - after having garrotted them.

The latest victim is found near Inez Ferry's antique shop, and because of this the lives of a small group of disparate people will become drawn into this case and it's increasingly introverted investigation. For the police are becoming more and more convinced that someone connected to the shop - anyone from the exotic assistant Zeinab, who is stringing along a variety of rich men, to one of the tenants in the flats above - could very well be a homicidal maniac...

This is everything that I expect a Ruth Rendell novel to be. It is, of course, impeccably written and psychologically excellent, so I need say no more about that. Indeed, The Rottweiler is another of Rendell's books that is entirely unique, in that for almost the first time ever she displays a delicious dark humour, veins of which run through the plot like black treacle. At times, this seems like a social satire, as she pokes fun at her characters - a couple of which are exaggerated to strange, slightly unnatural but hilarious effect - and directs her gaze onto everything from the media to the often bizarre relationships between men and women. Her characters are also particularly noteworthy, especially the compelling Inez, who relieves her grief by watching incessant re-runs of her late actor husband's TV shows, and slightly-autistic Will, who is possibly the most moving character she has ever depicted, who takes a perverse, almost unregistered, innocent pleasure from pushing away all prospective suitors for his beloved Aunt Rebecca, who desperately doesn't want to spend the rest of her life caring for her dependent nephew, though is racked with guilt because of that.

You would easily be forgiven for thinking that this is a serial killer novel, but this is really no more a serial killer novel than the Bible is a book solely about God. It is so much more than that. It is a book about the society required to breed killers; a book about the desires inherent within those killers, and why. It's a book about the people involved, how they can be draw into darkness and uncertainty through the effects of the gravity of crime. It's a book about how peoples live always changed when confronted with the horrific. At times, the serial killings themselves seem very on the periphery (I was going to say "incidental" but that would be entirely the wrong word) and it is eerie to read about them in such a detached way. It's also interesting how we, essentially, only know as much about the murders as the characters themselves do through their exposure to the media. Oh, yes, and while the ending doesn't have quite the shock factor of some of Rendell's work, it does have a fascinating psychological "incident", a nervy uncomfortable shift in the killer's behaviour.

To be honest, it's almost impossible to review a Ruth Rendell book and truly convince of her genius and say what you really want to without illustrating it by disclosing important aspects of the plot or simply re-telling little aspects of the story, which makes the task I have very hard. But rest assured this book of a contemporary and chilling London and a small group of people within it is brilliant. It's a novel that questions, among many things, the nature of morality, how we perceive others and ourselves, it examines ideas of the human need for companionship, and the different forms of love between men and women, and it tackles, as many of her books do on some level, the problem of "How eccentric or odd do you have to be before you become a danger to others, or even yourself?" And yet, it is really about none of those things. Those are just tiny stitches in her tapestry, small but illuminating strokes on her though-provoking canvas. It's about people, and the spider-web of life that connects everything to everything else. And I consider it to be brilliance in its purest form. It frustrates me to the point of sadness that many of her books remain out of print even in this, her native country. The only way to understand this is to read one of her works, (although don't begin here; start with "A Sight for Sore Eyes", possibly) because there is no one else today writing books quite like this. She's our modern Scheherazade. I just want her to keep telling stories all night long.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars For the thoughtful crime fan, 1 Nov 2003
By M. D. Smart (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
If you are looking for a sensational and bloodthirsty serial-killer tale in the mould of Thomas Harris et al, this book will probably not be to your taste. Ruth Rendell novels are about character, and no-one can match her expertise in probing the darker shades of human behaviour. The crimes here form a backdrop to the real action, which is the shifting tensions and suspicions between the employees and lodgers at a Marleybone antiques shop, who begin to believe they have a killer in their midst. If you enjoy an intelligent character study that also happens to be a rattlingly good read and positively bristling with tension, this is the book for you. If you want cheap, nasty thrills, look elsewhere.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars The rottweiler
I enjoyed this book. It was easy to read and easy to follow. I enjoyed the different characters and guessing what was going to happen next. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Eli

5.0 out of 5 stars Another brilliant yarn from Ruth Rendell
It took a few pages to get into this and then I was stuck! I just kept on reading 100 pages at a time as the story is very gripping, the characters are very real and as usual... Read more
Published 22 months ago by Witchybookworm

3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best example of her genius
The Rottweiler is the eponymous name for the serial killer operating in the same area as this book is set. In fact, a few chapters in we find out who it is. Read more
Published on 5 Nov 2007 by sam155

1.0 out of 5 stars Rottweiler Rubbish
I read this book as it was our book club choice for the month and I don't read "Crime" novels normally - we're experimenting with a range of genres. Read more
Published on 7 Sep 2006 by Rastar

1.0 out of 5 stars Hugely disappointing
I'm normally a big Rendell fan but this was a shocking novel.
A meandering story, plot loopholes galore and over-analysis aplenty were the lasting memories I had.
Published on 24 Jul 2006 by Angellica

1.0 out of 5 stars first and last Ruth Redell book i will read
I bought this because I thought it looked like a good title and a good front cover! But unfortunately that's all you get.

Boring, over analysing everything. Read more

Published on 31 Mar 2006

4.0 out of 5 stars A well researched read
I'm reading this now and enjoying it quite alot. I happen to live in the part of London where it is set, and am impressed with the references to places I also know. Read more
Published on 17 Feb 2005

1.0 out of 5 stars Oh Dear
I love Ruth Rendells books, my favourite was Tree of Hands. This is her usual formula, a group of different people thrown together in the same living space, and watching as their... Read more
Published on 12 Feb 2005 by Mrs Campbell

1.0 out of 5 stars Rottweiler? Certainly one dog that has had its day...
According to The Times, Ruth Rendell's 'The Rottweiler' is 'compelling and disturbing'. I assume that was a tongue in cheek comment. Read more
Published on 22 Dec 2004 by redshift362

4.0 out of 5 stars an easy read
I have just finished reading 'The Rottweiler' and must admit I found it incredibly entertaining. The plot unravels slowly, so as to keep the reader intrigued and the deep insight... Read more
Published on 11 Dec 2004

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