In
a House of Lies by Ian Rankin (Little, Brown and
Company, December 2018) is the 23rd book in the contemporary police
procedural series set in Edinburgh, Scotland, and featuring former Detective
Inspector John Rebus.
Rebus is long retired, reaching mandatory
retirement age a few books ago. (Rankin has often said that if he knew the
required retirement age of the Scotland police force at the time he started
writing this series, he would have made Rebus younger to give him more active
time on the police force.) Rankin has had to look for ways to keep him credibly
involved with the current undertakings of the local police. First he brought
him back as temporary staff to clear up a cold case backlog, and then he created
cases with some element of history that requires the investigating team to ask Rebus
to explain it.
This latest title involves the discovery of the
body of a private investigator who had been missing for about a dozen years.
What was once a missing persons case is now an established homicide, and all of
the original files must be reviewed. The original investigating team members,
including Rebus, are interviewed and their reports are re-evaluated. From the
beginning the family of the missing man filed complaint after complaint about the
police’s failure to locate their son, who was openly gay, and hints of police
homophobia, incompetence, and corruption hover over the re-opened case.
Siobhan Clark, former subordinate and wingman to
Rebus, is assigned to the project and serves as an information conduit to
Rebus. Matthew Fox comes back into the picture, after having been elsewhere for
a few books. Rebus as usual does his own looking under rocks and behind doors,
trying hard to pull his old frenemy Big Ger Cafferty into the frame. He has never
been successful in putting this old crime boss away, and it continues to gall
him. As usual in this series justice takes different shapes and colors in the
end.
I won a character name in
a Rebus book in a mystery conference charity auction years ago and this is the
book my name appears in. The forensic anthropologist is Aubrey Hamilton, who
makes a few appearances to work with the pathologist and the soils analytical
expert. It’s always entertaining to see how authors decide to use my name. In
this case I’m pleased to see it in a book that continues to uphold the high
standards of this bestselling series with well-realized characters and a
convoluted plot, in which everyone has something to hide.
·
Hardcover: 384 pages
·
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company (December 31, 2018)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0316479209
·
ISBN-13: 978-0316479202
Aubrey
Hamilton ©2018
Aubrey
Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and
reads mysteries at night.
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