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John Rebus: A Mysterious Profile
(2022)(A book in the Mysterious Profiles series)
(A book in the Inspector Rebus series)
A non fiction book by Ian Rankin
The New York Timesbestselling author tells the story behind Inspector Rebus, the hard-edged Edinburgh cop and superbly drawn character (The Times, London).
In this short work, Edgar and Diamond Dagger Award winner Ian Rankin delves into DI John Rebuss origins as a character, as well as his own origins as a writer. While author and character share a love of literature and a deep affection for Scotlands capital city, they differ in other ways, as Rankin entertainingly testifies, while revealing how this compelling figure has developed over the course of his long-running series of gritty crime novels (Kirkus Reviews).
[A] hard-drinking, chain-smoking, terminally melancholic hero . . . trapped in a world where mavericks are an endangered species. Booklist
Rebus is without doubt one of the funniest among the classical fictional detectives. The Guardian
With his stubborn insistence on tying up the frayed ends of every knotty clue, and iconoclastic refusal to be a team player . . . Rebus is a bane to his superiors but a blessing to readers. Publishers Weekly
In this short work, Edgar and Diamond Dagger Award winner Ian Rankin delves into DI John Rebuss origins as a character, as well as his own origins as a writer. While author and character share a love of literature and a deep affection for Scotlands capital city, they differ in other ways, as Rankin entertainingly testifies, while revealing how this compelling figure has developed over the course of his long-running series of gritty crime novels (Kirkus Reviews).
[A] hard-drinking, chain-smoking, terminally melancholic hero . . . trapped in a world where mavericks are an endangered species. Booklist
Rebus is without doubt one of the funniest among the classical fictional detectives. The Guardian
With his stubborn insistence on tying up the frayed ends of every knotty clue, and iconoclastic refusal to be a team player . . . Rebus is a bane to his superiors but a blessing to readers. Publishers Weekly
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