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Cargando... Ian Rankin: Three Great Novels: Rebus: The St Leonard's Years/Strip Jack, The Black Book, Mortal Causes (2001 original; edición 2001)por Ian Rankin (Autor)
Información de la obraRebus: The St Leonard's Years por Ian Rankin (2001)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Phew! This trilogy is rebus at his prime. The three books, Strip Jack, The Black Book and Mortal Causes, fit together well. Not just because they are consecutive adventures, but because they build from the, almost light, story of a corrupt politician through a darker tale of the consequences of a hotel fire on to the pitch black finale. Mortal causes is just about as bleak as it is possible to get: if Leonard Cohen decided to write a crime novel, this would be the outcome. The three novels are bleak, but never voyeuristic: Rankin reports, rather than admonishing, the bigotry and pure evil of some of his characters and this is much more menacing; much more effective than a preaching of the violent underbelly of society which, although I have, so far, been fortunate enough to miss out upon, I am sure exists. Review of The Black Book, the second crime mystery in this trilogy of Inspector Rebus: In terms of flow and suspense and quick pace, this -the third Rebus mystery I read- ranks best. It is not formulaic. Duty has put him in charge of a stake-out of a suspected extortionist. His friend and colleague Holmes gets a bump on the head which starts off Rebus's interest in the eponymous Black Book and a five year-old hotel fire. The spirallingly violent plot involves intimidation to Michael Rebus, a frame-up, a life-attempt on Rebus, and a second tragic fire. Eye-witnesses of the old hotel fire, which involved a murder, seem to become exposed in interviews with Rebus which quickly makes them vulnerable to silencing. A seemingly independent thread of an undesirable molester moving into Edinburgh is incorporated cunningly into the main plot. Last, but not the least, who bumped Brian Holmes on his head? sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las seriesInspector Rebus (Omnibus 4-6) Contiene
Strip Jack: MP Gregor Jack is caught in an Edinburgh brothel with a prostitute only too keen to show off her considerable assets. Then Jack¿s wife disappears. Someone wants to strip Jack naked and Rebus wants to know why. The Black Book: When a close colleague is brutally attacked, Rebus is drawn into a case involving a hotel fire, an unidentified body and a long-forgotten night of terror and murder. Rebus must piece together a jigsaw no one wants completed. Mortal Causes: It is August in Edinburgh and the Festival is in full swing. A brutally tortured body is discovered in one of the city¿s ancient subterranean streets and Rebus suspects the involvement of sectarian activists. The prospect of terrorism in a city heaving with tourists is unthinkable. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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I find Ian Rankin’s Strip Jack, the fourth book in his Inspector Rebus series to be particularly interesting because of the way it so consistently portrays the lighter side of the inspector’s personality. John Rebus, as most readers think of him, is a rather gloomy, cynical man both in his personal life and in the way he views everything he sees on the job. That is certainly the way I’ve come to think of the man based on the dozen or so Rebus books that I’ve now read. But that’s not at all the John Rebus that readers get in Strip Jack.
Instead, this John Rebus has a great, dry sense of humor; he’s a man who loves puns and other word play, and he displays that sense of humor so consistently that it seems to annoy his superiors to no end, especially those who are trying to get under his skin or reprimand him just before Rebus throws one of his pun-bombs in their direction. Rankin, who wrote this and two other Rebus novels while living in France, in fact, remarks on the overall tone of the novel in his “Introduction” to the three-book collection (Three Great Novels) that includes Strip Jack:
“I think the resulting novel is one of the lighter additions to the series. There’s not too much darkness; not too much blood. It was my attempt at a more traditional whodunnit. Maybe my surroundings were to blame. I’d exchanged high-pressure London and its daily grind for rolling hills, time and space. It couldn’t last and it didn’t.”
The Jack being “stripped” in Strip Jack is MP Gregor Jack, and the stripping process begins when the MP is caught in an Edinburgh brothel during a late night police raid on the establishment. Rebus begins to think something is unusual about Jack’s bad luck of being there exactly when cops show up as soon as he notices that all of the big, national newspapers have reporters and photographers outside the house but none of the local papers are even there. It’s obvious to Rebus that someone has tipped off the London papers in advance of the raid. And, Rebus being Rebus, that doesn’t sit well with him. Also, Rebus being Rebus, the detective that makes him curious enough to start poking around in MP Jack’s personal life to see if he can figure out who is working so hard to disgrace the man and strip him of everything he holds dear, including his political office.
Rebus, always willing to risk the ire of his departmental superiors, immediately begins his own “unofficial” investigation into the leak by stopping by the MP’s home to warn him about the tactics of the mob of reporters who are gathered at the man’s front gate. Then, more officially, he starts yanking on threads and following where those threads take him.
Bottom Line: Strip Jack, because of its lighter tone, will likely draw mixed reactions from longtime fans of the series. This John Rebus is not the man those readers know so well by now, and they may even find the character to be a little jarring in this iteration. The mystery surrounding Gregor Jack, his friends and his enemies, is not treated lightly by Rankin, however, and in the end, it is a satisfying one. ( )