<<< Return to review list

Standing in Another Man's Grave   by Ian Rankin

Disappointing Rebus installment, mostly let down by the ending. It takes time before the atmosphere really establishes, and on the whole there are too many characters to be able to follow.

A murder takes place in the past, and the mother realizes that there is a pattern of similar events on the A9 road previously. The only person who will consider the case is Rebus, now long retired but working for the force on cold cases as a civilian. There is some side-tracking with a gang of workers on the A9 carriageway, but ultimately it is Rebus’ old contacts who end up in the frame. There is much appearance of Gerald Cafferty, Rebus’ long-time foe, but is completely secondary and unneccessary. The relationship Rebus now has with him is unrealistic, them sharing drinks and banter in pubs.

In the end it turns out a former police chief’s brother is the culprit, but manages to hide his tracks successfully so that the police are stumped, and no-one will take Rebus seriously although he knows the truth. In the end Rebus gets an adversary to abduct and then almost murder the man, except that Rebus steps in at the last minute to stop this taking place. The murderer is then apparently frightened enough that he turns himself in. All in all, the ending is neither plausible, well elucidated, or even interesting.



You may comment on this review by filling in this form.

Name: 
E-mail: 
Your BookBlog URL: 

Comments (max. 900 characters, no HTML):