Publisher's write up:
“Because the first body was found in Wolf Street, because the
murderer takes a bite from each body, the press have found a new
terror, Wolfman...
Drafted down to the Big Smoke thanks to his supposed expertise in
the modus operandi of serial killers, Inspector John Rebus is on a
train south from Edinburgh. His Scotland Yard opposite number, George
Flight, isn't too happy at yet more interference. It's bad enough
having several Chief Inspectors on your back without being hounded at
every turn by an upstart Jock. Rebus is going to have to deal with
racial prejudice as well as the predations of a violent maniac. When
he's offered a serial killer profile of the Wolfman by an attractive
lady psychologist, it's too good an opportunity to turn down. But in
finding an ally, he may have given his enemies an easy means of
attack.”
Tooth and Nail is the
third book in the Inspector Rebus series. Its predecessor, Hide &
Seek was a disappointment and it
hence, when I started reading Tooth & Nail, naturally,
I didn't have any high expectations on this book. I became eager to
read Tooth & Nail when
I learnt that Rebus' next case is not going to be at Edinburgh, but
at London.
London
is terrorised by a murderer who has already killed four women, women
with absolutely no connection (in terms of profession, ethnicity,
background, etcetera). The killer is christened Wolfman by the press
since the body of the former's victim was found at Wolf Street. John
Rebus, after his successful tracking down of a serial killer in his
first adventure (Knots & Crosses),
his fame, to his surprise, reached the south, and he was deemed an
expert with serial killers (little did the Scotland Yard know that
the first case was a personal confrontation). So, he had to carry
with the burden of expectation from the Lothian and Borders police
back at Edinburgh and at the same time, cope up with the racial slur
from the London folk.
Probably
because I didn't have any high expectation, I found this book to be
quite interesting. After a gap in Hide & Seek, Rebus'
personal life had been touched upon again, with a sub-plot in the
book on his personal life and it was also reasonably well connected
to the main plot. Although the usual sidekicks of Rebus don't appear
in this, his very presence, owing to his astute
characteristics, is more than
enough to make the book interesting. Rankin also managed to grip the
reader's fingers to the pages of this book, and I was constantly
guessing who this Wolfman was going to be and what made the job all
the more difficult was that at a particular stage in the book, the
author manages to convince the reader that around half a dozen
characters have equal chance of being the Wolfman.
Since
Rankin had already moved out of Scotland, in order to not lose his
identity as a Scottish crime novelist, he also introduced a lot of
Scottish words such as hoolit, messages (groceries), wersh, etcetera.
“I also started to
introduce Scottish words into the text, perhaps to ensure that I
wouldn't lose them entirely.
After all, living in rural south-west France, I had few opportunities
to say things like wersh(sour), winching(going steady) and
hoolit(drunk)”. - Ian Rankin
But, like most of the other Ian Rankin books I've read so far (The Flood, Knots& Crosses, Watchman, Hide & Seek, Tooth & Nail and A Question of Blood), Tooth & Nail too had a disappointing
finish (Hide & Seek's was satisfactory while A Question
of Blood's finish was good). This maybe owing to the fact that
Rankin as a writer is still young but when it comes to a crime novel,
the end is very crucial and if that isn't proper, it undermines the
novel as a whole. There were also a few loose ends, topics which
needn't even have been brought up, put in crude terms, done just to
increase the number of pages and make the reader make stupid guesses
about the Wolfman.
In terms of language, facts, the amount of excitement it offered to
the reader and the finish, in a scale of ten, I'd give this book a
seven.
External Links :
http://oharasbookreviews.blogspot.com/2011/03/tooth-and-nail-by-ian-rankin.html
http://www.ianrankin.net/pages/content/index.asp?PageID=28
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tooth_and_Nail_(novel)
External Links :
http://oharasbookreviews.blogspot.com/2011/03/tooth-and-nail-by-ian-rankin.html
http://www.ianrankin.net/pages/content/index.asp?PageID=28
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tooth_and_Nail_(novel)
Rating
: 7 / 10
Have a nice day,
Andy