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Simisola (Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16)
Simisola - Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16
Author: Ruth Rendell
In the quiet Sussex country town of Kingsmarkham, the daughter of Nigerian physician Raymond Akande is missing. "It's probably nothing," says Dr. Akande to his friend and client Chief Inspector Wexford, whose help he enlists. — But the days that follow prove the doctor dreadfully wrong. A young woman is found murdered, not Melanie, ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780440222026
ISBN-10: 0440222028
Publication Date: 8/2/1996
Pages: 384
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 25

3.9 stars, based on 25 ratings
Publisher: Dell
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

SouthernDestiny avatar reviewed Simisola (Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16) on + 156 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Kingsmarkham, a sleepy little English town under the police jurisdiction of Chief Inspector Wexford, is suddenly confronted with a series of killings. To solve the crimes, Wexford must accept that Kingsmarkham is no longer free from the national ills of sexual abuse, racism, and murder, and must work through stereotypes that may keep him from catching a killer.
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coolelle avatar reviewed Simisola (Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16) on + 19 more book reviews
Ruth Rendell Examines Race

In this excellent police procedural, Rendell examines attitudes toward race in her characters. There are only nineteen "people of color" in Kingsmarkham, and Inspector Wexford and others assume they all know each other. Rendell tries to be progressive, but it's a struggle for her, just as being non-sexist is. Still, the book is terrific, and you get the sense that she knows just how flawed her characters are.
reviewed Simisola (Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16) on + 459 more book reviews
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"It's probably nothing," says Dr. Akande to Chief Inspector Wexford, who gets his usual chill upon hearing these words. "I'm trying in vain to locate my daughter Melanie." As Wexford's investigation of this missing person continues over days and weeks, it becomes his unhappy job to counter the tenuous hopes of the doctor and his wife. It is Wexford's professional opinion that Melanie is, in all likelihood, dead. A murdered woman is found: not Melanie, but the last person known to have seen and spoken to her. A second woman's body is discovered, again not Melanie's but, like her, young and black. A third woman turns up beaten and unconscious; like the previous victim, she is of Nigerian origin. That there is a connection is obvious. Exactly what it is that links these women and their misfortunes is the vexing mystery.
reviewed Simisola (Chief Inspector Wexford, Bk 16) on + 2 more book reviews
Ruth Rendell's Inspector Wexford books are one of my favorites. This one is satisfyingly complex and held my interest throughout.


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