I may still prefer the Victorian density of Asta's Book, but Inversion is unquestionably terrific. Julian Symons judged A Fatal Inversion the best of the Barbara Vines, and he may well be right. I'd have to say that those five Vine titles are about as good as anything ever produced in the crime and mystery genre that I have read. The fourth Vine, Gallowglass (1991), Symons pronounced an example of a writer " very much off form," and he had nothing at all to say about King Solomon's Carpet (1991), the fifth Vine, which would have appeared, presumably, when he was writing Bloody Murder, though, like A Fatal Inversion, it won the Crime Writers Association's Gold Dagger for best crime novel of the year.Īfterward followed vine's Asta's Book (1993), No Night Is Too Long (1994) and The Brimstone Wedding (1995), the first and last of which I think measure up to her first magnificent three. In the third edition of his mystery genre study Bloody Murder crime writer and critic Julian Symons had the highest of praise for Barbara Vine (aka the late Ruth Rendell), or at least her first three novels, that stunning succession of A Dark-Adapted Eye (1986), A Fatal Inversion (1987) and The House of Stairs (1988). He didn't want to remember any of this, he wanted to escape out of it to a blank screen.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |