The superb new entry in the historical series the New York Times Book Review hails as ''outstanding'' and the Cleveland Plain Dealer calls ''superb'' At the turn of the century, in a war taking place far from England, two soldiers chance upon an opportunity that will change their lives forever. To t
Ian Rutledge 11 - A Matter of Justice
โ Scribed by Todd, Charles
- Book ID
- 108062737
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 740 KB
- Series
- Inspector Ian Rutledge 11
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Charles Todd hasnt made a misstep yet in his elegant series featuring Scotland Yard detective Ian Rutledge, and A Matter of Justice keeps the streak going.
Cleveland Plain Dealer
The Washington Post calls the Ian Rutledge novels by Charles Todd, one of the best historical series being written today. A Matter of Justicethe eleventh in the New York Times Notable, Edgar Award-nominated, and Barry Award-winning seriesbrings back the haunted British police inspector and still shell-shocked World War One veteran in a tale of unspeakable murder in a small English village filled to bursting with dark secrets and worthy suspects. A New York Times bestseller as spellbinding and evocative as the best of Ruth Rendell, Anne Perry, Martha Grimes, and P.D. James, A Matter of Justice represents a new high for this exceptional storyteller.
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In the stellar 11th Insp. Ian Rutledge mystery (after 2007's A Pale Horse), Todd (the pseudonym of a mother-son writing team) seamlessly combines a fair-play whodunit with a nuanced look into the heart of darkness in the human soul. During the Boer War, Pvt. Harold Quarles takes advantage of a Boer attack on a British military train to enrich himself. When two decades later his battered corpse is found grotesquely displayed at his country residence in Somerset, Scotland Yard's Ian Rutledge must sift through the plethora of lies, omissions and motives surrounding Quarles, who had become a successful investment adviser in London. Because the victim was almost universally despised in Somerset, Rutledge has no shortage of suspects. The inspector's own inner struggles, stemming from his guilt over his morally questionable actions during WWI, make him a more human and complicated protagonist than most other series sleuths. (Jan.)
Copyright Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Any good historical novel steeps its reader in the details of a period. But Charles Todd does it with a passionand through a narrator uniquely qualified to understand human naturethat brings fresh possibilities to the genre. Todd writes with atmospheric charm and a dark psychological edge that makes Rutledge one of crime writing's most compelling recurring characters. Especially intriguing is Rutledge's own coming to terms with his guilt over actions committed in World War I. "Finding a way back had somehow seemed to be a final betrayal," he thinks in A Matter of Justice, as he again questions his own survival. The success of the series hinges on both clever plotting and the nuance with which the authors continue to develop their character.
Copyright 2009 Bookmarks Publishing LLC
Kindle Collection : mystery
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The superb new entry in the historical series the New York Times Book Review hails as ''outstanding'' and the Cleveland Plain Dealer calls ''superb'' At the turn of the century, in a war taking place far from England, two soldiers chance upon an opportunity that will change their lives forever. To t
Todd has written a first novel that speaks out, urgently and compassionately, for a long-dead generation.A meticulously wrought puzzle. New York Times Book Review An intricately plotted mystery. With this remarkable debut, Charles Todd breaks new ground in the historical crime novel. Peter Love
Book 11 of Matthew Cordwainer Medieval Mysteries. ** When a woman is murdered in the small village of Haxby, Cordwainer is called in to investigate, leaving Sheriff de Bury to conduct his own investigation into the finding of a rotting corpse immured in the wall of a house in York. When a second wo
Book 11 of Matthew Cordwainer Medieval Mysteries. ** When a woman is murdered in the small village of Haxby, Cordwainer is called in to investigate, leaving Sheriff de Bury to conduct his own investigation into the finding of a rotting corpse immured in the wall of a house in York. When a second wo
### Amazon.com Review Having just returned from France after World War I with a medal of honor and serious shell shock, Inspector Ian Rutledge struggles to settle back into his duties at Scotland Yard. When, despite his tenuous condition, an envious supervisor assigns him to a traumatic case involv