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Rennie Airth : River of Darkness
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Author: Rennie Airth
Title: River of Darkness
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 480
Date: 2005-05-31
ISBN: 0143035703
Publisher: Penguin Books
Weight: 0.7 pounds
Size: 0.83 x 5.2 x 7.7 inches
Edition: Reprint
Amazon prices:
$1.80used
$6.55new
$11.39Amazon
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Description: Product Description
Upon its original publication, River of Darkness awed readers who look for intelligent, well-plotted psychological mysteries. This “fine, frightening piece of work” (Kirkus
Reviews
) introduces inspector John Madden who, in the years following World War I, is sent to a small village to investigate a particularly gruesome attack. The local police dismiss the slaughter as a botched robbery, but Madden detects the signs of a madman at work. With the help of Dr. Helen Blackwell, who introduces him to the latest developments in criminal psychology, Madden sets out to identify and capture the killer, even as the murderer sets his sights on his next innocent victims.


Amazon.com Review
The main protagonist of River of Darkness is a Scotland Yard detective so damaged by his experiences during the First World War that his superiors worry about his ability to do his job. This may sound like Charles Todd's excellent series about Ian Rutledge, a shell-shocked cop from the same era. But Rennie Airth, a South African journalist who lives in Italy, has made his hero--Inspector John Madden--a somewhat different version of one of England's walking wounded. Madden is both gloomier (he lost his wife and young daughter to an influenza epidemic) and more pragmatic than the poetic, indecisive Rutledge.

Madden is sent to a town in Surrey where a local family has been massacred in what looks like a robbery gone wrong. He finds enough echoes of his recent battlefield experiences to conclude that the killer was just one man--most likely a former soldier using a bayonet. As for motive, it could well be perverse sexual passion, that "river of darkness" to which a psychologist introduces him. We meet the killer early on, watch him as he maintains a rigid control over every aspect of his life, then stare in horror as he periodically explodes into mad violence. Unlike Madden, this man has not been severely damaged or changed by the war; he has simply used it to channel and redirect his dark river. Airth's point--that survival comes in many shapes and sizes--gives a solid foundation to an impressive leap of imagination. --Dick Adler

Reviews: Suki (USA: NH) (2007/04/25):
Agripping murder mystery, right up to the end which I thought could have been less TV dramatic. But a whopping good read.



Cheryl Fox (USA: VA) (2010/09/08):
I really like this series. This is the first. The second is "Blood-Dimmed Tide".I'm going to get the third. It's nice sometiomes to be taken out of modern day life, with all the stresses and technological contenders for time and go back tyo a slower pace, different country and different time. This novel is suspenseful, the characters are intelligent, and that's what I look for.



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