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Talking to Strange Men
Talking to Strange Men
Author: Ruth Rendell
The coded messages that John Creevey should never have seen were coming in fast. Was it a major spy ring? A drugs gang? A protection racket? Whatever, to John Creevey the messages were a lifeline ? a means of getting back his wife and perhaps a way to harm the man who had seduced her away from him.
ISBN-13: 9780099535300
ISBN-10: 0099535300
Publication Date: 1988
Pages: 304
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 3

4 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Arrow
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
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reviewed Talking to Strange Men on + 242 more book reviews
Ruth Rendell has written yet another intricately plotted book. And, like all her other books I've read, her characters are multi-faceted. John Creevey's wife has recently left him which has left him emotionally devastated. On one of his long walks he discovers a "drop" whereby two different groups are dropping notes to each other. John reads the notes but makes sure to put them back after he's read them. He thinks they may be from either some sort of mafia or even spyrings. After a few unsuccessful attempts to get his wife back and a terrible encounter with an acquaintance, John decides to answer the notes he finds hoping to get his wife's boyfriend in trouble and thereby get his wife back. This ploy also doesn't work. Meanwhile, the spyrings are up to their own tricks. Fourteen year old Charles is sent on a mission which also turns out terrible. But Charles is brilliant; a prime candidate for future sociopath of England. These two plots intertwine beautifully. Newsweek describes Ms Rendell's books as strange, disturbing, seductive. The ending isn't tied up neatly but done in a way to keep possibilities open. For me, the only "down" to this book were the descriptions of the factory area where John takes his walks. There were terms used that I had no idea what was meant. Yet, still, this desolate are successfully conveys an ominous feeling.
reviewed Talking to Strange Men on + 16 more book reviews
absorbing and tense-good rendell.


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