Fleshmarket Close
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Fleshmarket Close | |
Author | Ian Rankin |
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Country | Scotland |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Detective fiction |
Publisher | Orion Books |
Publication date | 2004 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 440 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 0-7528-5896-3 |
Preceded by | A Question of Blood |
Followed by | The Naming of the Dead |
Fleshmarket Close is a 2004 novel by Ian Rankin, and is named after a real close off Edinburgh's Cockburn Street. It is the fifteenth of the Inspector Rebus novels. It was released in the USA under the title Fleshmarket Alley. It was the second episode in the second Rebus television series starring Ken Stott, airing in 2006.
[edit] Plot summary
Detective Inspector John Rebus has no desk to work from, as a hint from his superiors that he should consider retirement, but he and his protegee Siobhan Clarke are still investigating some seemingly unconnected cases. The sister of a dead rape victim is missing; stolen medical skeletons turn up embedded in a concrete floor; a Kurdish journalist is brutally murdered; and the son of a Glasgow gangster has moved into the Edinburgh vice scene.
The book uses two new settings; a sink estate divided between racist thugs and refugees (based on Wester Hailes), and a small town whose economy is dominated by an internment camp for asylum-seekers (based on Dungavel).
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