Thursday, 26 November 2015

Black and Blue - Rebus on the wagon!

There is a killer on the loose, who has been nicknamed "Johnny Bible". He seems to be paying a grim homage to the infamous killer named Bible John who was active some twenty years previously, but was never caught and seemed to just stop killing. This stirs up bad memories for John Rebus (in this, his 8th outing), the troubled detective based in Edinburgh, who had known one of Bible John's victims and has always felt the failure of never bringing the killer to justice. Is there a connection between the two killers, or could they indeed be the same person? Whilst itching to be put onto the Johnny Bible case, Rebus is, instead, assigned to investigate the grim discovery of a body impaled on some railings ... bad enough one would think, but the man was also tied to chair and had a plastic bag over his head. Was this murder or a bizarre accident? Not only that, but he is hounded by the press and is put under investigation when a person he helped to put away commits suicide in prison, still claiming his innocence. Rebus can't help but antagonise pretty much everyone around him and is given a baby sitter in an attempt to keep him out of mischief ... it kind of works in that it helps keep him off the bottle, but his baby sitter gets sucked into helping Rebus with the many threads to the investigation. Ian Rankin does a great job of combining the personal and professional lives of those in the police force and brings into focus the difficulty of keeping those two things separate with any great success. With plot twists by the bucketful and comings and goings involving the North Sea Oil Industry, the reader is led in all sorts of directions but slowly and gradually, everything starts to come into focus. The writing is, as you would expect from Ian Rankin, realistic and engaging. The ending is not the one that Rebus would have chosen, and, I suspect, not all readers will like it either ... there is no clean tying up of all loose ends here, but then, life's like that! Black and Blue does not leave Rebus a happy chappy  ... but then, that's just as it should be, any other way just wouldn't suit him!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 516 print pages.
Price I paid: Free, borrowed from my husband.
Formats available: print; audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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