Hubbry Logo
In a House of LiesIn a House of LiesMain
Open search
In a House of Lies
Community hub
In a House of Lies
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
In a House of Lies
from Wikipedia

In a House of Lies is the 22nd novel in the Inspector Rebus series written by Ian Rankin.[1]

Key Information

Rebus, now retired and in poor health, is called in to revisit a cold case in which the body of an investigator is discovered in the boot of a car, secured with police-issue handcuffs.

Plot

[edit]

Some boys discover a car with a long-dead body in the boot, in a woodland which has been the subject of a property dispute. Rebus, now retired, worked the badly-handled 2006 missing-persons case. He had tried to protect the missing man's lover, the son of a detective inspector in the old Strathclyde Police, and had also been hoping to tie in 'Big Ger' Cafferty. The murder inquiry now is handled by a team from Police Scotland, but Detective Inspector Siobhan Clarke and Detective Inspector Malcolm Fox are included. Clarke has recently been investigated by a corrupt pair of Anti-Corruption Unit officers for leaking information to a reporter, and she is being harassed by a mysterious person over a recent case. Rebus, at her request, re-investigates that case; he tangles with the ACU team, and hopes again to see Cafferty connected to the body-in-the-boot murder.[2][3]

Rebus is suffering from COPD and has given up cigarettes and almost stopped drinking alcohol.[4][5] The book gives some attention to modern media and its potential for both public and private bullying.

Background

[edit]

Ian Rankin has stated that inspiration for the novel in part came from the murder of Daniel Morgan,[6] who was a private detective in South London in the late 1980s.[7] He died of axe wounds to his head in a pub car park in Sydenham, South London in 1987.[8] He was investigating alleged police corruption at the time.[9]

Reception

[edit]

The book was a bestseller, entering the hardback chart at No. 1 on the first week of its release.[10] Reception was largely positive; Barry Forshaw, writing in The Guardian, said, "How has Rankin kept the series fresh for 22 novels? Deft characterisation. Readers must keep up with a lengthy dramatis personae, but there’s nothing wrong with making us work a little."[11] Likewise, Mark Sanderson, writing in the Evening Standard, called the book "A brilliantly twisted case for Rebus" and said that "..no one in Britain writes better crime novels today."[12] Paul Connolly (The Metro) gave the novel four stars out of five and said that the novel had:

a plot so complex it will elude anything other than total concentration, Rankin crafts one of the great Rebus novels, a vibrant slab of a book as gripping as it is intoxicating.[13]

Julian Cole, writing in the Northern Echo, gave the book four stars out of five, and called it "...[a] good rattling read, let down only by too many unnecessary dialogue modifiers."[14]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.