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Rendell, Ruth 1930–: Critical Essay by Francis Wyndham

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About 3 pages (753 words)
Ruth Rendell Summary

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With twenty-two books written over eighteen years, Ruth Rendell has established a double eminence in two separate categories of crime fiction: the classic puzzle, with a stable background and a recurring cast headed by a mildly eccentric detective and his more conventional subordinate; and the novel of pure suspense, in which a blundering innocent and a haunted psychopath become fatally entangled in a paranoid atmosphere of cross purposes and sinister coincidence. In both fields success is difficult, but for opposite reasons: the first has been so thoroughly mined, by a brilliant team stretching from Agatha Christie to P. D. James, that its resources are in danger of being exhausted; and the second, pioneered by the lone figure of Patricia Highsmith, is all the more daunting because comparatively unexplored. Combining a masterly grasp of plot construction with a highly developed faculty for social observation, Ruth Rendell's remarkable talent has been able to accommodate the rigid rules of the reassuring mystery story (where a superficial logic conceals a basic fantasy) as well as the wider range of the disturbing psychological thriller (where an appearance of nightmare overlays a scrupulous realism)….

Put On By Cunning continues the chronicles of Kingsmarkham, that murder-prone Sussex village protected by Chief Inspector Wexford and Inspector Burden, as neatly paired a couple in their way as the two Ronnies. When first met in 1964 (From Doon With Death) Wexford was fifty-two years old, "thickset without being fat"; six years later (A Guilty Thing Surprised) he "looked more mountainous than ever"; by 1972 (Murder Being Once Done) a thrombosis had been diagnosed; and in 1979 (Means Of Evil) he is described as "a tall, ungainly, rather ugly man who had once been fat to the point of obesity but had slimmed to gauntness for reasons of health". He has a rather irritating addiction to literary quotations (often reflected in his creator's oddly unmemorable titles) which he exchanges competitively with his nephew, Detective Superintendent Howard Fortune of the Kenbourne Vale CID, but which tend to go over Burden's head. He is happily married to the understanding Dora, although in 1975 (Shake Hands For Ever) he only just resisted infidelity with the frankly sensual Nancy Lake. His eldest daughter Sylvia is married with two sons; in 1978 (A Sleeping Life) she briefly left her husband as a feminist protest, but soon returned. The younger daughter is his favourite: Sheila Wexford of the Royal Shakespeare Company, who has played Jessica at the National, and starred in a revival of Maugham's The Letter, and is now a household name after appearing for five years as Stewardess Curtis, the most beautiful of the air hostesses in the successful TV serial Runway.

This is a free excerpt of 446 words. There are 753 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Rendell, Ruth 1930–: Critical Essay by Francis Wyndham from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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