| Hide and Seek (Inspector Rebus Novels) | 
enlarge | Author: Ian Rankin Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks Category: Book
List Price: $7.99 Buy Used: $3.14 You Save: $4.85 (61%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 12997
Media: Mass Market Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0312963971 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780312963972 ASIN: 0312963971
Publication Date: December 15, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Some wear on book from reading, some spine creases, wear on binding and pages, we guarantee all purchases and ship all items via USPS mail.
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The seamier side of Edinburgh September 23, 2008 No one knows his city like John Rebus (Ian Rankin's detective). He knows all the good things and the things that tourists like to see, but he also knows the seedy and secretive things. These are things that occur in the hidden alleys and bolt holes throughout the city. In this book, even John Rebus is surprised at what he discovers when he starts to investigate a junkie's death. The man appeared to die of a drug overdose, but it turned out to be murder, and the investigation took Rebus to places he'd never been before. These books are extremely well-written, but they are hard-hitting and definitely darker than the average UK police procedural. But it kept my interest piqued, and I will certainly continue to read this excellent series.
Solid, above average maybe too fast-paced at the end June 12, 2008 This is a very good book. Ian Rankin writes about his character Inspector Rebus in such a readable way, the pages just pass by while we read the life of Rebus.
I think that Rankin's one weakness is the ending of his books (this may relate to his earlier books more than the later ones) in that they seem awfully rushed and a little fanciful. Once the obligatory action scenes have died down, Rankin reverts to his true form of quality writing.
Good Second Novel May 26, 2008 Hide and Seek was a very good second novel by Ian Rankin. This is the second in the series with John Rebus as the detective. We are learning more about Rebus, his friends and his surroundings as he solves an intricate and delicate murder case. More of his Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde personality comes out and it takes the reader by surprise often times.
There are some twists and turns, but not quite at the 90 degree angle that I like. They were subtle in this story. There isn't a lot of wasted wording as the book comes in at around 200 pages. You can see the author experimenting with different plotlines as he continues this very interesting series.
I enjoy the British mysteries as much or more than their American counterparts because there is less flash and more straight out thinking involved. It is a grind it out solving of the case much in the same vein as McBain and the 87th Precinct. While this one was not quite up to the standards of Knots and Crosses, it was nonetheless worth reading and entertaining. I am looking forward to the next one.
A peek under the kilt of a nasty side of Edinburgh! April 10, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The plot is certainly simple enough on the face of it. Inspector Rebus is assigned to investigate the death of a junkie in his run down tenement squat. The victim's body has been obviously arranged after death in the shape of a crucifix. Candles surround the corpse and the crude pentagram on the wall is so fresh that the paint is still tacky. At first blush, the cause of death appears to be a simple heroin overdose taken in the throes of some sort of odd satanic ritual but the medical examiner's autopsy discloses something entirely different. What now appears to be a murder by lacing a junkie's fix with rat poison takes Inspector Rebus on a tour of the seamy underbelly of a gritty Edinburgh that you certainly won't find in the Michelin five star travel guide.
Junkies, addicts and pushers; gay and straight prostitution; dog fighting; illegal high stakes gaming and brothels; corruption in the police force, on the bench and at the bar; alcoholics and drunkards - they all make their way onto the stage of "Hide and Seek" in a novel that seems determined to portray Scotland as a bleak and unrelentingly dreary den of sin and iniquity. On the face of it, the novel has the flavour of a Michael Connelly police procedural but the comparison stops right there. Rankin has provided little in the way of descriptions of dogged police work and the pursuit of clues and has focused on dialogue and character development almost to the exclusion of everything else.
So how does one rank that? From the point of view of looking for a great police procedural or an engaging mystery, I was singularly unimpressed (two stars at best). But the dialogue and the characterization was first rate. The clever, appealing, understated British style of wit and humour was apparent throughout the entire novel despite its dark setting (unquestionably worth four stars). I suppose we've got to give it an overall rating of three stars and try another entry in the series to see if there are better pickings as far as plot goes.
Paul Weiss
Ian Rankin/Inspector Rebus take Hide and Seek to a new level. April 27, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have to say that I wasn't sure what to think of this book, especially since I'm not a big fan of mystery/detective books, but I read Ian's first book in the series and enjoyed it so I thought I'd see if he could keep my interest on the second......and boy did he!!!! It still boggles my mind how Ian writes a 210 page book with so many twist and turns and yet it never feels like he has to rush to finish the story. I guess what I'm saying is that this book flows extremely well for having so much going on and yet it only takes him 210 pages to wrap up the story! Inspector Rebus continues to grow as the main character in this book and he has a great mix of "hard edge attitude", the ability to "turn on the charm", and yet still be human and have "weak" moments as well. It also helps that Ian has added some side characters from the police force to help readers undertsand how John Rebus interacts with his fellow co-workers (on and off the job). If you are new to this series, get the first book (Knots and Crosses) then get this book. However, you will be fine buying this book even if you didn't read the first one. Either way, you won't regret it.....I sure didn't.
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