Friend of the Devil (Inspector Alan Banks Series #17) by Peter Robinson

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Synopsis

On a cliff edge overlooking the North Sea, a quadriplegic woman in a wheelchair stares unseeingly at the waves. She had been murdered. And, miles away, in a storeroom in the Maze, a medieval warren of yards and alleys at the heart of Eastvale, Yorkshire, a young woman lies sprawled on a heap of leather scraps. She too has been murdered. Their bodies are discovered at about the same time that DI Annie Cabbot, on secondment to the Eastern Area force, wakes with a severe hangover in the bed of a young man she barely recognizes. From these three strands, Peter Robinson weaves his latest complex and compelling story.

While DCI Alan Banks tries to figure out how anyone was able to murder Hayley Daniels, when the closed-circuit cameras trained on the entrances to the Maze show that no one preceded or followed her into its shadows, Cabbot learns two things that make her blood run cold: the real intentions of her one-night stand and the true identity of the quadriplegic woman. A ghost from the past is back to haunt both her and Banks.

Peter Robinson’s Inspector Banks novels are among the best detective fiction in the world, and their multi-layered stories continue to surprise, engross, thrill, and delight readers. Friend of the Devil is a superb showcase of how deftly he balances horror with humour, police procedures with the nuances of all-too-human emotions, and endings with the promise of new starts. Once again, Robinson transcends the usual limits of the genre in this dazzling novel about the obsessive power of vengeance.

Publishers Weekly

Corpses may pile up in Robinson's thrillers about Yorkshire Chief Insp. Alan Banks and his now former lover, Det. Insp. Annie Cabbot, but rock and roll will never die. In Robinson's 17th novel, named for a Grateful Dead song, Banks frequently departs from his sleuthing to listen to enough rock anthems that it seems odd for an audio version to limit its music to just a few seconds of ominous introductory notes. Prebble's pitch-perfect rendition clarifies a complex tale of two serial murders that harks back to an earlier Banks-Cabbot investigation. His narration remains on cue and unruffled even when describing a paraplegic's severed neck (victim number one), the brutalized corpse of a beautiful young girl (victim number two) or Annie Cabbot's sad fall from grace at the end of a very boozy evening. Robinson's yarn comprises intriguing police procedure and the even more intriguing personal and professional relationships of his investigators. It's an engaging medley, and Prebble's vocal expertise makes it sing. Simultaneous release with the Morrow hardcover (Reviews, Oct. 8). (Mar.)

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Biography

Peter Robinson is the recipient of numerous awards for his Inspector Banks novels, including the prestigious Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for the French translation of In a Dry Season, the Edgar Award for the short story “Missing in Action,” Denmark’s Palle Rosenkrantz Award, and several Arthur Ellis Awards for Best Novel. In 2002, he was awarded the Dagger in the Library by the British Crime Writers’ Association. Robinson was born in Yorkshire, England, and immigrated to Canada after graduating from the University of Leeds. He now lives in Toronto.

Customer Reviews

Friend of the Devil (Inspector Alan Banks Series #17)by Anonymous

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March 01, 2008: Fans of the Inspector Banks series will hope that Inspectors Alan Banks and Annie Cabbot can resolve their personal and romantic issues as well as the two cases that reunite them professionally in 'Friend of the Devil.' One murder - of a college student who was raped and strangled - is assigned to Banks' squad, the other - of a wheelchair bound woman discovered near a cliff edge with a slit throat - to Cabbot's unit, and the cases soon intersect. Cabbot's identification of the dead quadriplegic leads her and Banks back to one of their most harrowing cases, that of the serial killers from 'Aftermath.' Robinson's flair for characterization, especially of his two leads, lifts this mystery series above most others. It's refreshing to to read a crime novel where the people take precedence over the plot because so many crime writers do it the other way around. That's not to say that 'Friend of the Devil' does not have a compelling plot, because it does - it's suspense-filled and twisty-turny and you can't help but turn the pages quickly, even as you slow down every now and then to appreciate the fine character touches. Another first-class entry from this author.

Friend of the Devil (Inspector Alan Banks Series #17)by Anonymous

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September 11, 2007: Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks rises to the occasion again in this the 17th book in the series. Old friends like Annie Cabbot, Hatchley, Nowak & Winsome Jackman all re-appear and in part this story harks back to one of the main characters in 'Aftermath'. Peter Robinson's knowledge of North Yorkshire, which he describes so well and accurately 'I know, it's my former part of the world' is encyclopaedic, all the more remarkable as he lives in Toronto. A couple of gripping stories of murders most foul in one book - that's value for money! Peter Robinson gets everything right even down to the introduction of a smoking ban in English pubs as from 1st July. Go out and buy it and enjoy it. Meantime I'm greedy - I am eagerly awaiting the 18th...


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