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Le petit été de la Saint-Luc

par Ruth Rendell

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: Inspector Wexford (6)

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5841340,642 (3.65)13
On a stormy February afternoon, little Stella Rivers disappears - never to be seen again. There were no clues, no demands and no traces. And there was nowhere else for Wexford and his team to look. All that remained was the cold fear and awful dread that touched everyone in Kingsmarkham.Just months later, another child vanishes - five-year-old John Lawrence. Wexford and Inspector Burden are launched into another investigation and, all too quickly, they discover chilling similarities to the Stella Rivers case.Then the letters begin. The horrifying, evil, threatening letters of a madman. And suddenly Wexford is fighting against time to find the missing boy, before he meets the same fate as poor Stella ...… (plus d'informations)
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Kidnapped or Murdered?
Review of the Arrow Books/Cornerstone Digital Kindle eBook edition (2010) of the original Hutchinson hardcover (1971)

Wexford gave a tiny sigh, the outward and audible sign of an inward and outraged scream. ‘I don’t believe it,’ he said thinly. ‘Just enlighten me as to which one of you two intellectuals is acquainted with George Eliot.’ Far from living up to Monkey’s image of a man intimidated by the police, Mr Casaubon had brightened as soon as Wexford spoke and now rejoined in thick hideous cockney, ‘I see him once. Strangeways it was, 1929. They done him for a big bullion job.’ ‘I fear,’ Wexford said distantly, ‘that we cannot be thinking of the same person. - Inspector Wexford reacts upon being introduced to blackmailer 'Mr. Casaubon' by small-time crook Monkey Matthews. Mr. Casaubon is otherwise the name of a character in George Eliot’s (penname of Mary Ann Evans (1819-1880)) novel Middlemarch.


This continues my 2023 binge read / re-read of Ruth Rendell's (aka Barbara Vine) novels and it is the 6th in the Inspector Wexford series. Part of the joy with Wexford is the number of literary quotes and allusions which Rendell inserts into the text, but which are usually not explained. The above quote is an exception as it hints that the name "Mr. Casaubon" is associated with writer George Eliot. We can share and enjoy Wexford's surprise that the small time crooks he meets would have any knowledge of the Middlemarch novel.

See cover at https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/53/Nomoredyingthen.jpg
Cover image for the original Hutchinson hardcover edition from 1971. Image sourced from Wikipedia.

No More Dying Then is otherwise a novel about a child abduction which hints back to an earlier disappearance and possible murder of another child in the same vicinity. Wexford's assistant Mike Burden is still mourning the loss of his wife and is distracted from his police duties. An extensive subplot involves him becoming involved with the divorced mother of the 2nd abducted child and the reader will become concerned that the woman may in fact be a suspect. The tension increases when the body of the first child is found even while the second is still missing. It is all wrapped up with a twist ending.

Another favourite quote from the book:
Night is a time for conjecture, dreams, mad conclusions; morning a time for action.


Trivia and Links
No More Dying Then was adapted for television as part of the Ruth Rendell / Inspector Wexford Mysteries TV series (1987-2000) as Season 3 Episodes 1 to 3 in 1989 with actor George Baker as Inspector Wexford. You can watch the entire 3 episodes on YouTube ( )
  alanteder | Feb 24, 2023 |
A child disappears in a village where this has happened similarly before. Wexford's second in command gets involved with the distraught mother, definitely a no-no.
The solution to each disappearance is different. ( )
  ffortsa | Dec 18, 2022 |
Rendell is in full force here, offering her trademark insightful reflections on a wide variety of characters, including, this time, Wexford’s colleague Mike Burden.

I enjoyed the plot, in which her many red herrings swim back and forth between two missing child cases months apart. Despite the fact that I was struggling with the YouTube app (not, IMO, a user-friendly interface but the only audio option I could find), I stayed engaged through the end.

For the first time in the series (to my recollection) there are some interesting women in [b:No More Dying Then|83432|No More Dying Then (Inspector Wexford, #6)|Ruth Rendell|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1403168226l/83432._SY75_.jpg|2013066]! Although I found one of them to be somewhat unbelievable, others were fully realized adults. Definitely a move in the right direction.

It has been so many years since I originally read this series that each book I now revisit as part of a group read is a refreshing experience. So glad I'm participating! ( )
  BarbKBooks | Aug 15, 2022 |
Finally!

I don't know what has kept me coming back to this series, but I'm glad I held on. Perhaps it was the strength of the later, stand-alone novels I'd read of Rendell's, but this series had so many problems in the first five volumes. What made the difference? Two things: characters, and technology.

Primarily, this series is about what all good series (hold on a sec, maybe I'm jumping the gun on "good" for the Wexford series) are: the characters. What has been odd at times is the focus Rendell places on Burden, the nudge-winkingly named understudy of the titular Wexford who seems to be so much more interesting to the author. Yet, the books are a part of the Wexford series. Still, I'm starting to see what she's doing now, even if she wasn't aware of it in the beginning. Much like Doyle's detective, these stories are really about Burden, much as the Holmes stories are about Watson (Really, they are). Wexford comes in to make the intuitive leap (Holmes never really deduces anything-- he's really all about inductive reasoning) and the human drama centers around Burden, who in this novel is still grieving the loss of his wife, who apparently died in between books. The focus on Burden becomes necessary because Rendell's made Wexford too perfect; the worst you can say about him is he can be a bit prickly. Burden, who is so stoic and conservative in the earlier novels, here reveals a vulnerability, even a recklessness, that while not Rebus in nature by any stretch, gives us a chance to see a more dimensional character. Finally. I'm still digesting, but it seems as though Rendell has created (at least in this novel, but it seems to be pointing in a particular direction--we'll see how it goes) Wexford as a comic foil to Burden's pathos.

The second thing that makes this book so much better is a minor thing, but it goes far in correcting a near-fatal error for me. Rendell largely avoids technology. More than anything else, technology can date a story, and in the earlier books Rendell clearly, obviously, places her stories in the 60s. I kid you not, the installation of an elevator plays centrally in the previous novel as an intruding, unwanted advancement, and the novel instantly becomes a period piece as a result. This novel? No technology. It could have happened (almost) at any time. It almost makes up for the fact that Wexford is a grandfather in this book and, 40 years later is newly retired. How old is this guy?

OK, rambling. This is a welcome change, and I can only hope it is a trend going forward. We'll see tonight... ( )
  allan.nail | Jul 11, 2021 |
missing children, a widowered inspector strange return and resolution
  ritaer | Mar 23, 2020 |
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» Ajouter d'autres auteur(e)s (9 possibles)

Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Rendell, Ruthauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Agnoli Zucchini, LucianaTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Elwenspoek, MonikaTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Gerson, MarkAuthor photoauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Jacono, CarloArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Lambert, JamesArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Navarro, Marie-LouiseTraductionauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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So shalt thou feed on death that feeds on men,
And death, once dead, there's no more dying then.
-Shakespeare, Sonnet 146
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For Gerald Austin
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The spell of fine weather which so often occurs in the middle of October is know as St. Luke's Little Summer.
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On a stormy February afternoon, little Stella Rivers disappears - never to be seen again. There were no clues, no demands and no traces. And there was nowhere else for Wexford and his team to look. All that remained was the cold fear and awful dread that touched everyone in Kingsmarkham.Just months later, another child vanishes - five-year-old John Lawrence. Wexford and Inspector Burden are launched into another investigation and, all too quickly, they discover chilling similarities to the Stella Rivers case.Then the letters begin. The horrifying, evil, threatening letters of a madman. And suddenly Wexford is fighting against time to find the missing boy, before he meets the same fate as poor Stella ...

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