THE
HANGING GARDEN by IAN RANKIN ISBN0752817116 £5.99
Any novel named
after a Cure song must be good. Amongst Ian Rankin's previous jobs was a stint
as a punk musician, so this choice of title is quite appropriate for that
reason. The title also refers to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon. However,
Rankin's main character, Detective Inspector John Rebus, does not himself
appear to be an article of antiquity or an early 80s throwback (much the same
thing). Rebus works in the gritty city of Edinburgh (see Irving Welsh's FILTH).
With crime boss Big Ger Cafferty in gaol, a vacuum has opened up in Edinburgh's
underworld. Tommy Telford is the man moving in on Cafferty's patch.
Rebus' bosses are intent that he should not get involved, and so assign him to
a war crimes case involving an elderly Nazi. But then Rebus' daughter is
knocked down in a suspect hit and run. Is someone gunning out after Rebus? And
what will Rebus do when he discovers the identity of the driver? This is a well
crafted, subtle novel on the theme of revenge, with repercussions from the
Second World War to the modern Chechen conflict. And Ian Rankin is not a one to
provide easy answers. This is a novel which will certainly have you searching
your own soul. It's also the best British crime novel I've read this year, and
was the winner of the 1997 CWA Gold Dagger for fiction.