Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Murder Being Once Done (Rendell, 1972)

Ruth Rendell. Murder Being Once Done. (1972) A re-read. I also vaguely recall the video version. Dr Crocker has ordered Reg to take a break from work, with a complete change of scene. He and Dora visit Reg’s nephew Howard and his wife Denise in London. Dora and Denise get on very well supervising Reg’s diet and exercise, but Reg is bored.
     Howard happens to be a Detective Superintendent.  He avoids talking shop with his uncle, under the impression that it would excite his heart into sudden failure. A corpse turns up in a graveyard in an insalubrious quarter of London. When Howard finds Reg at the crime scene, obviously intent on finding out what he can, he asks Reg to help him. There follows the typical Rendell plot, with red herrings, errors in judgement and interpretation, with-holding of respectability-damaging evidence, and the final revelation that rearranges everything into a psychologically plausible story.
     Rendell understands the dark places of the human heart, and the fears and jealousies that fester there. Here, she also sketches the cruel effects of pleasure-denying religionism. Recommended. ***½

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