book data
579 ratings,
3.83
average rating, 30 reviews
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published
February 1st 2006
by Goldmann
(first published 1998)
details
Taschenbuch, 478 pages
literary awards
isbn
3442454298
(isbn13: 9783442454297)
description
Ian Rankin's ninth book about Inspector John Rebus of the Edinburgh police is so full of story that it seems about to explode into shapeless anarchy …more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 757)
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5 stars (119)
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4 stars (269)
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3 stars (167)
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2 stars (20)
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1 star (4)
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avg 3.83
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in December, 2005
From cover:
"Detective John Rebus-as tough and complex as they come-wages his own private war with the bottle in a Scotland as smokey, seductive, and multi-layered as a single-malt. And in Ian Rankin's growing body of work, readers can always find gripping suspense, a clever mystery, and raw, wry portraits of the human condition.
Drugs. Extortion. Slavery. Organized crime is fighting for a hold on John Rebus's peaceful Scotland. And when Rebus rescues a young Bosnian g...more
"Detective John Rebus-as tough and complex as they come-wages his own private war with the bottle in a Scotland as smokey, seductive, and multi-layered as a single-malt. And in Ian Rankin's growing body of work, readers can always find gripping suspense, a clever mystery, and raw, wry portraits of the human condition.
Drugs. Extortion. Slavery. Organized crime is fighting for a hold on John Rebus's peaceful Scotland. And when Rebus rescues a young Bosnian g...more
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Read in April, 2009
This turned into a pretty good mystery, after a slow start. I continue to admire Inspector Rebus's perseverance and dedication to the truth and his refusal to ever compromise his ideals of justice. Ian Rankin continually presents Rebus with decisions of right and wrong that would tempt a saint. But you know he will always choose the right course. Unfortunately for him, Rebus's dedication to his work does prevents him from balancing work with personal and family life: ie: his marriage has long ...more
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Read in July, 2009
complicated thriller -- DI Rebus manages to solve the connections between the "bad guys" -- no way i had enough information to have solved it ahead of time -- and that's one of my criteria for a good book -- if i can ID the villain before the good guy does, then i don't enjoy the book as much. In this book, there were enough villains that I was stumped -- so I gave it 4 stars but as a general rule, a book of the crime-thriller-detective story, I prefer to give only 3 stars :)
With ...more
With ...more
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Read in September, 2009
I'm about midway through reading the entire Rebus series. Not sure why I like these so well. They're pretty hard-boiled and I usually prefer a more traditional "British" mystery. I think I am drawn to the Edinburgh location. Having been there several times, visualization is easy. When our hero meets someone for coffee in the crypt below St. Giles church, I know just what it looks like (and that the scones are good).
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Read in March, 2009
recommends it for:
mystery lovers
I am reading this book bc we are in Edinburgh right now looking for a place to live and a job. Like all Rebus books, they are set in real live Edinburgh, featuring real streets and semi real people. So its helpful to learn about this beautiful city and get psyched for moving here. Plus the plots and characters are great!
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Read in September, 2002
Ian Rankin, The Hanging Garden (St. Martin's Press, 1998)
In a couple of months of reading almost nothing save mysteries, The Hanging Garden stood out as the best of the lot. Rankin is capable of weaving clues into a narrative with the deftest hand in a British mystery author since Colin Wilson, and his characters are more than engaging enough; as with most series mysteries, reading them out of order is liable to drop the reader into the middle of a plotline, and so it is here. The soap...more
In a couple of months of reading almost nothing save mysteries, The Hanging Garden stood out as the best of the lot. Rankin is capable of weaving clues into a narrative with the deftest hand in a British mystery author since Colin Wilson, and his characters are more than engaging enough; as with most series mysteries, reading them out of order is liable to drop the reader into the middle of a plotline, and so it is here. The soap...more
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Another book in the gritty Rebus series. Rankin improves wirth each installment. Note to self-read in order-I'd read the next book already, so there was a spoiler in there. 2 things that keep me reading-the wonderfully complex and ambiguous Inspector John himself and the villains. Hiss!
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Read in June, 2009
A interesting combination of plots, but this Rebus novel didn't really draw me in like previous ones has. The characters felt more sketchy and two dimensional, even though the majority are regular ones.
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Read in April, 2009
It was a little difficult for me to read sometimes. The writing was great but the subject matter- human trafficking & war crimes- was difficult at times. Brutal.
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Read in October, 2009
Another great episode in the life of Inspector John Rebus. Drama to the maximum but an ending you'll never believe. All things just can't be fair.
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Read in September, 2009
My first Rankin. A good time. Lots of double crossing, almost too many characters to keep track of. I have a soft spot in my heart for Edinburgh.
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Read in March, 2009
Not plausible. Japanese, Russian, Scottish gangsters with a possible WW2 war criminal in the background ...
Annoying and silly
Annoying and silly
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Read in November, 2009
I much prefer the BBC tv series based on Rankin's mysteries. This ws my first go at reading him and I did enjoy it, but wasn't WOWed by it. Perhaps some of the slang flew over my head - where in the tv series I could catch the drift better by the actors' expressions. I think I'll re-watch all those old episodes my Mum taped for me.
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The Hanging Garden (Inspector Rebus Novels) by Ian Rankin (1999)
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Read in December, 2008
Good story line and character development. Rebus is great.
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Read in February, 2009
One of Rankin's usual literate and engaging mysteries. I didn't necessarily like the war criminal aspect, especially because it was mostly a red herring (in fact, two). And to be frank, Rebus on the wagon is not as fun as Rebus not, which added to the side plot about his daughter being in an accident made for more self-pity than warranted. But as the plot works out and you wait for the price to be paid by Rebus, it does its job.
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Read in April, 2009
Turf wars for Edinburgh's twilight world of drugs, prostitution and gambling are routine for DI Rebus but this time the competition runs deep, with the Russian Mafia and the Japanese looking for a controlling interest. Rebus is his own man, as ever, but being on the wagon makes him an even less enticing character, full of self-pity.
Drier and sparer than earlier Rebus books, but its twist and turns and red herrings make it as compelling as ever.
Drier and sparer than earlier Rebus books, but its twist and turns and red herrings make it as compelling as ever.
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mystery (on 33 people's shelves)
crime (on 13 people's shelves)
fiction (on 13 people's shelves)
mysteries (on 9 people's shelves)
ian-rankin (on 6 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 6 people's shelves)
crime-fiction (on 6 people's shelves)
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