The Monster in the Box (Chief Inspector Wexford Series #22) by Ruth Rendell

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2009
  • 304pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,363

    Reader Rating: (3 ratings)

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Customer Reviews
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2009
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 304pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,363

    Synopsis

    The Monster In The Box is the latest addition to Ruth Rendells's classic and beguiling Inspector Wexford series. In this enthralling new book, Rendell, "the best mystery writer in the English-speaking world," (Time), takes Inspector Wexford back to his days as a young policeman, and to the man he has long suspected of murder - serial murder.

    Outside the house where Wexford investigated his first case - a woman found strangled in her bedroom - he noticed a short, muscular man wearing a scarf and walking a dog. He gave Wexford an unnerving stare. Without any solid evidence, Wexford began to suspect that this man - Eric Targo - was the killer. Over the years there are more unsolved, apparently motiveless murders in the town of Kingsmarkham and Wexford continues to quietly suspect that the increasingly prosperous Targo - van driver, property developer, kennel owner and animal lover - is behind them.

    Now, half a lifetime later, Wexford spots Targo back in Kingsmarkham after a long absence. Wexford tells his long time partner, Mike Burden, about his suspicions, but Burden dismisses them as fantasy. Meanwhile, Burden's wife, Jenny, has suspicions of her own. She believes that the Rahmans, a highly respectable immigrant family from Pakistan, may be forcing their daughter, Tamima, into an arranged marriage - or worse. 

    The New York Times - Marilyn Stasio

    Subversive writer that she is, Ruth Rendell slyly sends up two iconic figures of English society—the animal lover and the guardian of political correctness—in her new Inspector Wexford mystery…it's a pleasure to have flashbacks to a boyish Wexford in hot pursuit of girls of a certain alluring type. It's also a revelation to see how meticulously Rendell reconstructs that long-ago period and place from mere glimpses of a street without cars or an open field where a boy could see the stars.

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    Biography

    From the start of her illustrious career, Ruth Rendell's novels have blurred the distinction between literature and commercial fiction. Although Rendell is classified as a writer of mysteries and crime thrillers, her elegant prose and superb literary skills elevate her far above the conventions of those genres.

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

    Another Great Book by Ruth Rendellby JessLucy

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    November 24, 2009: I love the Inspector Wexford novels as they are psychological thrillers and very well written. It was interesting to have a look into Wexford's past throughout the book. Rendell is certainly a master at her craft; she writes like a dream. You may also like End in Tears and Not in the Flesh, by the same author; as well as the novels she writes under the name Barbara Vine. Acid Row, The Devil's Feather and The Shape of Snakes are also wonderful books by another English writer: Minette Walters.

    Not as interesting as the book cover suggestsby Anonymous

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    November 05, 2009: I've read a few of Ruth Rendell's novels. Some I've liked quite a bit; others not so much. This one falls in the latter category. Much of this story involves Wexler recalling events from his youth, but I began to tire of the author's constant references to the way things used to be as opposed to how they are now. There were also times when she seemed to feel it necessary to explain things too much to her American readership. For example, describing the autumn colors in her setting was fine, but then she adds that there are no reds in the leaves in England, and that you only find those in North America where they have maple trees. Who cares? The book cover is what drew me to read this one, but it really had nothing to do with the story. I may read more of her books, but I'll likely avoid the Inspector Wexler ones.