Peter Robinson’s Banks and Cabbot mysteries are some of the best in the genre; he’s one of a handful of top-ranking writers of British mysteries, along with Ruth Rendell, Reginald Hill, Ian Rankin and Elizabeth George—I must simply drop everything the moment I get my hands on their newest books. Robinson hasn’t had his breakout book yet, but he’s currently a secret among mystery aficionados. It’s not just the suspense, either. Robinson’s finely drawn characters and excellent descriptive writing—in particular, his love for music—make his novels a feast for the senses as well. In Friend of the Devil [Morrow, Jan.], Alan Banks investigates the death of a young woman who has been raped and murdered in Eastvale, while a woman in a wheelchair is found slain at the edge of a cliff in the nearby district where Annie Cabbot is working. Her investigation of that death uncovers ties to an earlier case that has haunted them both. Simply outstanding!
Galley Talk
Carol Schneck, SchulerBooks, Okemos, Mich.
Nov 02, 2007
A version of this article appeared in the 11/05/2007 issue of Publishers Weekly under the headline: