
The Impossible Dead
A Scotland, Cultural, Fiction book. It was a quiet streetpeople kept themselves to themselves. It Ian Rankin, The Impossible Dead //
A major inquiry into a neighboring police force sees Malcolm Fox and his colleagues cast adrift, unsure of territory, protocol, or who they can trust. An entire station-house looks to have been compromised, but as Fox digs deeper he finds the trail leads him back in time to the suicide of a prominent politician and activist. There are secrets buried in the past, and reputations on the line.
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I doubt hed give me the smell from his fartsno, tell a lie: in that one respect hes being more than generous. Ian Rankin, The Impossible Dead // It was a quiet streetpeople kept themselves to themselves. It Ian Rankin, The Impossible Dead // Christ on a bike, Tony Ian Rankin, The Impossible Dead //
It's a thoroughly predictable line, but a wholly accurate one: Malcolm Fox is not John Rebus. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but the fact is that Fox remains, after two books, a not overly compelling character. In this book his status as an investigator of internal police corruption is repeatedly called into question by any attentive... Malcolm Fox is Rankin's alternative to Rebus and a very different character he is too. He's a tee total sticker for the rules and not remotely interested in music. Therefore Fox's character can't really compete with Rebus in terms of charisma, which tends to slightly harm the Fox novels and is perhaps why Rankin has placed the rather... I came to the Rankin novels somewhat late, my mother has read everything that Ian Rankin has written; if her favourite author wrote a new version of the telephone directory she would buy the hardback version and want it signed. But when I was off work for a while, she gave me the first Rebus novels and after the first few pages I was...