Andrew Taylor

Bookends: Corpses in the coal hole

Corpses in the coal hole

issue 30 July 2011

Ruth Rendell has probably pulled more surprises on her readers than any other crime writer. But the one she produces with her latest novel is a little unusual even by her standards. Set in the present, The Vault (Hutchinson, £18.99) deals with the discovery of four corpses in the disused coal hole of a Georgian cottage in St John’s Wood. The main investigator is Rendell’s long-running series hero, Chief Inspector Wexford, now retired and living part-time in Hampstead. Called in, a little implausibly, as a police adviser, he copes with what are in effect two murder cases, with different timescales, victims, motives — and killers. He and his wife Dora also find the time to sort out a potentially lethal phase in the love life of their feckless middle-aged daughter.

But Wexford learns only part of the story. Rendell’s more dedicated readers will know more — for the real surprise is that the murder location, Orcadia Cottage, was also the principal setting of her non-series psychological thriller, A Sight for Sore Eyes, a stark fable about the price of love and lovelessness; this came out in 1998 and has now been reissued in paperback.

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