Reissued in the stunning new livery alongside EXIT MUSIC - new in paperback. New for this edition - specially commissioned Reading Group Notes. Ian Rankin is a regular No.1 bestseller and Guardian fastseller. He has won numerous awards, including the CWA Gold Dagger and the Edgar Award. Ian Rankin makes up more than 10% of all UK crime sales. He also constantly gets excellent reviews: 'RESURRECTION MEN is Rebus's 13th outing, and it bears all the qualities that have established Rankin as one of Britain's leading novelists in any genre: a powerful sense of place; a redefinition of Scotland and its past; persuasive dialogue; and a growing compassion among its characters' New Statesman 'RESURRECTION MEN is right up there with the best of this terrific series' Observer 'RESURRECTION MEN makes for addictive reading and should consolidate the reputation of Ian Rankin as a crime writer of real talent' TLS
Ian Rankin is a No.1 bestseller, and has received numerous awards, including the prestigious Diamond Dagger. He lives in Edinburgh, and in 2003 received an OBE for his services to literature.
This is Rankin at his best, and, boy, that's saying something
*TIME OUT*
Quite apart from their excellence as detective novels, every one of
them adds something interesting to our understanding of the social
landscape of Edinburgh, which Rankin portrays with such subtlety
and sensitivity
*THE TIMES*
As is usual with Rebus novels, the plot is so thick you could stand
a spoon up in it ... Rankin's Rebus novels should be required
reading for anyone whose knowledge of Edinburgh has been derived
from visits to the Festival ... Rankin is still very much a
Category A crime writer
*SUNDAY TELEGRAPH*
Resurrection Men is Rebus's 13th outing, and it bears all the
qualities that have established Rankin as one of Britain's leading
novelists in any genre: a powerful sense of place; a redefinition
of Scotland and its past; persuasive dialogue; and a growing
compassion among its characters'
*NEW STATESMAN*
As Ian Rankin and Inspector Rebus are regular visitors to the
bestsellers list I see no reason why Resurrection Men should not
follow that well-trodden path. All the Rankin virtues are present -
compulsive readability, sharp dialogue, the believable pettiness of
the police procedural background and, looming over the book as
ever, the formidable presence of the Jekyll-and-Hyde city of
Edinburgh. There is also, at times, a wonderful economy that can
capture an entire atmosphere in a few words
*DAILY MAIL*
Rankin is pretty much unrivalled at the vivid delineation of
character. John Rebus, tormented, dogged, moral, his prickliness
repelling those he most wants to attract, remains one of the great
creations of modern mystery fiction. Resurrection Men is right up
there with the best of this terrific series
*OBSERVER*
In the Rebus books Rankin has created an Edinburgh that is
textured, vivid, plausible, perhaps even real ... Even viewed
solely as a whodunit, Resurrection Men stands some distance above
the competition. Rankins juggles three tense and fascinating,
apparently unrelated cases, each of which for a lesser writer would
be a book in itself, before late in the novel drawing them together
in a clever, unexpected but utterly convincing denouement
*DAILY EXPRESS*
Rankin is a phenomenon. He has made Edinburgh an imaginary or
rather fully imagined city as nobody, except Spark, has done since
Stevenson ... With each book I find myself wondering if he can pull
it off again; so far he has never failed. I would rather read
Rankin than any other living Scottish writer except Muriel Spark
and William McIlvanney ... They call his work crime fiction, but
the adjective is superfluous ... these novels are totally
absorbing. Once I start reading one, all else goes by the board
till I have finished it
*SPECTATOR*
The thirteenth novel in Rankin's Rebus series is his most mature
work yet. His pacing is so acute and the supporting characters are
so well drawn that this book escapes the shackles of the crime
novel genre and can be classed as great fiction, full stop
*TIMES PLAY*
This is Rankin at his best, and, boy, that's saying something *
TIME OUT *
Quite apart from their excellence as detective novels, every one of
them adds something interesting to our understanding of the social
landscape of Edinburgh, which Rankin portrays with such subtlety
and sensitivity * THE TIMES *
As is usual with Rebus novels, the plot is so thick you could stand
a spoon up in it ... Rankin's Rebus novels should be required
reading for anyone whose knowledge of Edinburgh has been derived
from visits to the Festival ... Rankin is still very much a
Category A crime writer * SUNDAY TELEGRAPH *
Resurrection Men is Rebus's 13th outing, and it bears all
the qualities that have established Rankin as one of Britain's
leading novelists in any genre: a powerful sense of place; a
redefinition of Scotland and its past; persuasive dialogue; and a
growing compassion among its characters' * NEW STATESMAN *
As Ian Rankin and Inspector Rebus are regular visitors to the
bestsellers list I see no reason why Resurrection Men should
not follow that well-trodden path. All the Rankin virtues are
present - compulsive readability, sharp dialogue, the believable
pettiness of the police procedural background and, looming over the
book as ever, the formidable presence of the Jekyll-and-Hyde city
of Edinburgh. There is also, at times, a wonderful economy that can
capture an entire atmosphere in a few words * DAILY MAIL *
Rankin is pretty much unrivalled at the vivid delineation of
character. John Rebus, tormented, dogged, moral, his prickliness
repelling those he most wants to attract, remains one of the great
creations of modern mystery fiction. Resurrection Men is
right up there with the best of this terrific series * OBSERVER
*
In the Rebus books Rankin has created an Edinburgh that is
textured, vivid, plausible, perhaps even real ... Even viewed
solely as a whodunit, Resurrection Men stands some distance
above the competition. Rankins juggles three tense and fascinating,
apparently unrelated cases, each of which for a lesser writer would
be a book in itself, before late in the novel drawing them together
in a clever, unexpected but utterly convincing denouement * DAILY
EXPRESS *
Rankin is a phenomenon. He has made Edinburgh an imaginary or
rather fully imagined city as nobody, except Spark, has done since
Stevenson ... With each book I find myself wondering if he can pull
it off again; so far he has never failed. I would rather read
Rankin than any other living Scottish writer except Muriel Spark
and William McIlvanney ... They call his work crime fiction, but
the adjective is superfluous ... these novels are totally
absorbing. Once I start reading one, all else goes by the board
till I have finished it -- Allan Massie * SPECTATOR *
The thirteenth novel in Rankin's Rebus series is his most mature
work yet. His pacing is so acute and the supporting characters are
so well drawn that this book escapes the shackles of the crime
novel genre and can be classed as great fiction, full stop * TIMES
PLAY *
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