Dead Souls (1999 novel)
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Author | Ian Rankin |
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Country | Scotland |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Detective fiction |
Publisher | Orion |
Released | 1999 |
Media Type | |
Pages | 496 pages |
ISBN | ISBN 0-7528-7716-X |
Preceded by | The Hanging Garden |
Followed by | Set in Darkness |
Dead Souls is a 1999 novel by Ian Rankin. It is the tenth of the Inspector Rebus novels. It was the third episode in the Rebus television series starring John Hannah, airing in 2001. The title refers to Joy Division's song "Dead Souls" and to the 1842 Nikolai Gogol novel Dead Souls, quotes from which appear at the beginnings of the two parts of the book.
[edit] Plot summary
While investigating a poisoner at Edinburgh Zoo, Detective Inspector John Rebus sees a known paedophile photographing children. After a chase ending in the hippopotamus enclosure, Rebus decides to 'out' the man, in spite of assurances that he is trying to reform. As a campaign against the man starts, Rebus hears that the son of an ex-girlfriend has gone missing and starts investigating his disappearance from a nightclub with a mysterious blonde.
A convicted killer comes back from the US having served his time in prison, with an agenda he wants to pursue. Rankin incorporated the novella Death is not the End as the missing person plotline of this novel.
Ian Rankin's Inspector Rebus series |
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Knots and Crosses | Hide and Seek | Tooth and Nail | Strip Jack | The Black Book | Mortal Causes | Let it Bleed | Black and Blue | The Hanging Garden | Dead Souls | Set in Darkness | The Falls | Resurrection Men | A Question of Blood | Fleshmarket Close | The Naming of the Dead |