It's a while since I read the last book in this series featuring John Rebus, the grumpy Edinburgh policeman, and I was looking forward to getting to know him again. However, The Black Book, by Ian Rankin just didn't grab me as much as I had hoped. Don't get me wrong, it is a perfectly fine novel, but there seemed to be a bit of a spark missing that would have taken it to the level I was anticipating. As the book opens, Rebus finds himself out of favour with his girlfriend, Patience, and living back in his own flat with his student tenants. Then his ex-con of a brother turns up looking for a place to stay, which stirs up some familial turmoil. Into this, we have several incidents - someone is knifed outside a butcher's shop, a body is dumped on the coast and, Holmes, a colleague of Rebus gets a smack on the head leaving a local diner. During the investigation, Rebus gets wind of Holmes' little "black book" and on looking at the coded entries starts to suspect that his workmate has stumbled upon an unsolved murder from 5 years ago involving some very dodgy local faces. This sets him on a trail which, inevitably, leads him into conflict with his boss (no change there), and Big "Ger" Macafferty - a dangerous villain who has never been brought to justice despite numerous attempts by many in the local constabulary, including Rebus himself. Will our hero finally be able to outsmart Macafferty and bring him to justice after all these years? This is a well written book and there is plenty of action to keep the interest levels going. However, where it fell down for me was that there were so many characters that things got a bit confused at times, and I couldn't work out where they were all fitting into the story until right at the end. Some people would say that this is good thing - to not know what was going to happen - which I would usually agree with, but there were so many strands that it was too much to get your head around at times. But it might just be me - got a lot of non-book related things whizzing around my head at the moment! However, it hasn't put me off these books, I really enjoy Rebus as a character - I just didn't feel that this was one of the best!
My STAR rating: THREE.
Length: 340 print pages.
Price I paid: 50p in a local charity shop.
Formats available: Print; MP3 CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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