

He's at his best when he focuses on Rebus and the city of Edinburgh itself. Rankin deftly captures the mad circus-the media, the security, the demonstrators-of the G8 summit, but this background muddies the narrative waters. Webster's death, never wholly resolved, does connect with Rebus's investigation, but the link is tenuous at best. Rebus is more than willing to flout authority in his dogged pursuit of Colliar's killer, who may be a vigilante intent on punishing rapists. No one really cares about the case except for Rebus, and that's mainly because Colliar was muscle for Edinburgh's crime boss "Big Ger" Cafferty, with whom Rebus has tangled in earlier novels. The first half of the book is a pacy, punchy read, set against the backdrop of the G8 summit held in Scotland that year. 2008) Publisher: Orion ISBN: 0752883682 Ian Rankin dedicates his seventeenth John Rebus novel 'to everyone who was in Edinburgh on 2 July 2003'. While his colleagues are preoccupied by ensuring security at the conference, Rebus is devoting his energy to the murder of Cyril Colliar, a recently released violent sex offender. Rankin, Ian - The Naming of the Dead Paperback: 544 pages (Aug.

), Ben Webster, a Scottish delegate to the Group of Eight summit, dies suspiciously a couple of days before the world's leaders gather in Scotland in 2005. John Rebus (after 2005's Fleshmarket Alley At the start of Rankin's overly complex 18th book to feature Edinburgh's Insp.
