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Mortal Causes (1997)

Mortal Causes (1997)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.95 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0312960948 (ISBN13: 9780312960940)
Language
English
Publisher
st. martin's paperbacks

About book Mortal Causes (1997)

It's been quite a long time since I read a Rebus novel and I really enjoyed getting to know the character again. I was surprised by how familiar I was with the supporting cast. I think this is the sixth book in the series and the cast has grown quite large but all the characters seemed well developed. The most interesting part of the book for me was the continuing relationship between Rebus and the local gangster Big Ger Cafferty. They have a understanding of mutual respect and obviously see parts of themselves in each other but still repeatedly come into conflict. It will be interesting to see how this develops through the rest of the series.There is also a subplot about a female lawyer becoming a little obsessed with Rebus and causing trouble for him in his personal life. This provides a little relief from the darker parts of the story.This book is quite a lot darker than I remember the others in the series being. There are several graphic murders and the sense of danger is very high. The paramilitary angle of the story really raises the stakes and gives the book a different feel to others in the series. Rebus also gets into quite a few fights which he almost never wins.The only real criticism I have is that there are a lot of characters and with all the twists and turns in the story I sometimes felt a bit lost. By the end of the book though I had a good grasp on things and everything wrapped up in a very satisfying way.Time to read the next one.

I've bought a few Rebus novels in my local library booksales over the last year, and picked up this one at random after some urging by an old school-mate and frequently hearing Ian Rankin being praised in the media. The setting, and the topical (for the time) nature of the plot were very interesting to me, but sadly the writing didn't cut the mustard. By about half way through I decided to skim rapidly to the end, without even bothering to read the climactic scene. It's a pity, because I really wanted to like the book. I learnt a few Scottish words and read descriptions of the interiors of a few police stations, and pubs and bars, but there wasn't enough besides that to hold my interest. Descriptions were much, much too brief and viewed too much through the prism of the main protagonist, Inspector Rebus, and same went for the descriptions of the characters. There was something about the style of writing, too: I felt as if some kind of golden rule of writing was being ignored, and not in a creative way.In summary, to enjoy this novel, you'd have to enjoy perceiving things through Rebus' eyes. As he is not remotely likeable, and I couldn't identify with him, for me it didn't seem worth reading on.

Do You like book Mortal Causes (1997)?

Reading Rebus novels in whatever order I find them is not doing Rankin's work any favour, but at least I've put off reading the final book until I've got to the others. The fact that some Rebus novels are brilliant while others are simply okay is emphasised by my scattershot approach. Mortal Causes is not one of the stronger Rebus mysteries.Sectarian violence as the backdrop makes for an interesting through line but it feels that Rankin did not do as much as he could have to construct the novel. Twist characters are not developed enough beforehand for their twists to have much weight or shock value, and some key characters have such walk-on roles that when they become important later on I had trouble remembering who they were.On the home front, Rebus gets caught up with a psychotic bit on the side that goes nowhere. In fact, Rebus' interpersonal relations with everyone on a private level are undercooked. Patience, his girlfriend, gets short shrift and, this being an early book, Siobhan isn't a character so much as she is a name. The part where she tells Rebus that who she sees a play with is none of his business really jarred.Mortal Causes is ultimately functional Rebus, but written with too light a touch for what Rankin normally aims for: we get an idea of crimes and of society, but not of character - and Rebus without Rebus is not Rebus at all.
—Alex

One of the (many) things I like about these books is that they go way beyond the crime genre and are basically Ian Rankin's running commentary on what's happening in Scotland/the world. This time it's a little excursion to Northern Ireland and sectarianism, as well as the Fringe Festival. I find these books educational and read them with a dictionary next to me - can't remember when I last learned so many new words. (Probably in an interview with JDB from the Manics.) Where's the next Rebus novel?
—Gesine

This story features the damaged character of Inspector John Rebus. The policeman comes to life rapidly for the reader and because he isn’t infallible, handsome, or a flashy character; he feels real. He has a vulnerability which comes across, but it is tempered by his dogged determination. He is at once, tough, but fragile.Edinburgh is one of my favourite cities, and at first sight is not the first place I would expect to set a murder story, or aim to create a chain of events that would hold the reader’s attention. From the first paragraph, I was drawn into this story, and readily believed the characters lived and breathed. It is a well told, and believable tale. ‘Mortal Causes’ was my first time reading Ian Rankin’s work. I saw a documentary which featured the man as he set about writing a book, and the programme related the writer’s journey with his new story. It was actually my wife that commented that there were numerous similarities between my working practises and Mr. Rankin’s. No need to tell you how nice that felt, even as a passing observation.I’m pleased to say it wasn’t a personal empathy with Ian Rankin that kept me reading, but an immediate and prolonged interest in the characters. I don't know how it ranks with other Rebus stories, but if you like crime investigation, you will enjoy this book.
—Tom Benson

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