Set in Darkness: An Inspector Rebus Novel
by Ian Rankinpublished
November 19th 2001
by St. Martin's Minotaur
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binding
Mass Market Paperback, 448 pages
isbn
0312977891
(isbn13: 9780312977894)
description
Edinburgh police inspector John Rebus's obsession--rock & roll--seems odd for a man whose dark, depressed side is so central to his character, but...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Crime fiction fans
This is definitely the best Rebus novel, I have read so far (I am reading them chronologically). An already great series turns downright fantastic in this book, where it seems a lot of the threads that have been running throughout the series come together. Not only is the plot well put together, but the characters really shine and DI John Rebus has never been darker. As detectives go, he has got to be one of the saddest characters out there; a lonely man, drinking way too much and he knows it, b...more
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bookshelves:
contemporary_post_1945,
mystery,
police_procedural,
scotland
Read in March, 2003
Set in Darkness - G+
Rankin, Ian - 11th in series
Two masked men abduct women on their way home from singles bars; a mummified corpse turns up bricked into a fireplace in one of devolved Scotland's new government buildings; a prospective New Labour candidate is battered to death; and Inspector Rebus's old antagonist Ger Cafferty is allowed home from prison to die of cancer...Ian Rankin's gloomy new crime novel has all the usual ingredients of his Rebus series--Rebus's drinking, his messy rel...more
Rankin, Ian - 11th in series
Two masked men abduct women on their way home from singles bars; a mummified corpse turns up bricked into a fireplace in one of devolved Scotland's new government buildings; a prospective New Labour candidate is battered to death; and Inspector Rebus's old antagonist Ger Cafferty is allowed home from prison to die of cancer...Ian Rankin's gloomy new crime novel has all the usual ingredients of his Rebus series--Rebus's drinking, his messy rel...more
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Read in August, 2007
So this one may have been a bit coincidence-heavy, with a distracting, not engaging rapist subplot (it does allow Rankin to explore Siobhan's personality), but it is Ian Rankin--for my money the best current mystery novelist out there. The wise-cracking (but never cutesy) dialogue, the distinctive characters (the portrayal of Linford is especially on target, although I'm not sure I buy the extremes he goes to; Rankin does a nice job of selling it, however), and the taut plot that never slows dow...more
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bookshelves:
audiobook,
recorded_books
Read in March, 2008
Rented from Recorded Books.
It's an excellent story, but as with the previous Rebus audiobook, I find the narrator, Samuel Gilles, to be inappropriate, or possibly the the producer had the wrong idea. The narrator has a very plummy English accent, which for a novel set in Edinburgh just seems wrong. And while he does a wide variety of British regional accents very well, very few of the characters have Scottish accents, which again seems wrong. I also found his narration of female character...more
It's an excellent story, but as with the previous Rebus audiobook, I find the narrator, Samuel Gilles, to be inappropriate, or possibly the the producer had the wrong idea. The narrator has a very plummy English accent, which for a novel set in Edinburgh just seems wrong. And while he does a wide variety of British regional accents very well, very few of the characters have Scottish accents, which again seems wrong. I also found his narration of female character...more
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Read in April, 2008
One of the most fun aspects is Inspector John Rebus's propensity for thinking in song titles, or snippets of song lyrics, usually from the '60s and '70s, although he is occasionally introduced to more modern music by other characters. I usually go through a Rebus book in 24 hours or so, unable to put it down. Of the 13 I've read so far, this stands out as the best.
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The title says it all, this is a very 'dark' novel, not only dark in terms of the predominant night setting but also themes. This is the first Rebus I read, I was delighted to find that a modern detective novel can not only be gripping but literary too. Have since read several more of Rankin's oeuvre but, like so many things in life, I haven't forgotten the first.
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bookshelves:
contemporary-fiction,
mystery-crime-thriller
Read in September, 2007
Rebus rides again, this time with the Edinburgh underworld and the Scottish rock and roll scene. I'm reading Rankin haphazardly- in no particular order and with scant attention to tracking Rebus's development, but no matter. It's good, mucky fun and intrigue, buttered popcorn to the usual diet of salad and wheat germ ;)
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Read in August, 2008
The protagonist, John Rebus, is a Scottish police detective solving the murder of a man stuffed in a fireplace in one of Scotland's historic buildings. He is sarcastic and of course, smarter than everyone else in the book. I just love the Scots and Brits way of solving mysteries!
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Read in January, 2008
Very enjoyable, well written, extremely complex but worth the effort it takes to follow the intricacies of the plot
I look forward to reading more from Rankin
I look forward to reading more from Rankin
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Read in January, 2007
So this is my first time reading Ian Rankin and so far I really enjoy him. He is reminiscent of Nelson Demille for me.
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The first Inspector Rebus book I read, right before a trip (and on the way) to Edinburgh. Got me hooked.
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bookshelves:
fiction
As crime books go, Rankin is good, and infused with British lingo.
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Read in January, 2001
Return to form for the master of Tartan Noir.
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