Ruth Rendell An Unkindness of Ravens (1985) Joy Williams, neighbour and acquaintance of Dora Wexford, tells her that “Rod is missing”. At first, it looks like Rodney Williams has done a bunk. He’s a sales manager for a paint company, and shortly after his disappearance a letter of resignation is sent to his boss. But then his car turns up abandoned and partly cannibalised.
The investigation is complicated by a group of militant feminists who believe in sexual apartheid. Mike and Jenny Burden are expecting their first child, which causes stresses that Mike doesn’t know how to handle. The Williamses are a dysfunctional family who keep secrets and bend facts. It’s one of Wexford’s most frustrating cases, taking several months to solve. But it’s one of Rendell’s better Wexford novels, with a nice repetition of a paint colour motif, and a well done placement of red herrings. Recommended. ****
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