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Watching the Dark: An Inspector Banks Novel…
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Watching the Dark: An Inspector Banks Novel (Inspector Banks Novels) (edition 2014)

by Peter Robinson (Author)

Series: Inspector Banks (20)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
7385130,501 (3.81)73
When Detective Inspector Bill Reid is found murdered, Chief Inspector Alan Banks, suspecting police corruption, handles the investigation with the utmost discretion until he discovers that Reid's murder is linked to the disappearance of a young English girl six years earlier.
Member:ibkennedy
Title:Watching the Dark: An Inspector Banks Novel (Inspector Banks Novels)
Authors:Peter Robinson (Author)
Info:William Morrow Paperbacks (2014), Edition: Reprint, 384 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:None

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Watching the Dark by Peter Robinson

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» See also 73 mentions

English (48)  Dutch (2)  Swedish (1)  All languages (51)
Showing 1-5 of 48 (next | show all)
Thriller
  BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
Inspector Banks #20

I dung out an old book hiding deep into my library “Watching the Dark” was first published in 2012, it was far time to give it a go. This book is my introduction to this author and now I know why people say he is a grandmaster of mystery fiction. Everything is smoothly said and the story immediately pulls you in. This installment was an excellent place to begin.

It kicks off with the murder of a policeman DI Bill Quinn convalescing at a treatment center and found dead on the grounds, pierced through the heart with an arrow. Bank is brought in to investigate and soon discovers compromising photos of Quinn with an underage woman....Working the case not only with his partner DI Annie Chabot but also imposed to him is the enigmatic Joanna Passero from the Professional Standards...her presence is anything but welcome....One search brings another and DI Bank ends up in Estonia to unravel not only this mystery but also one that crossed his path decade ago and has haunted him ever since.

I zipped through this story in no time; it is very active and moves along without needless violence and meaningless sex scenes. The mystery develops bit by bit and teases us along while offering several clichés of people in high places. Well a bit of humour well placed is refreshing. The author has written a very believable scenario of human trafficking and immigrant slave labour into an intriguing police procedural and has set his drama both in the UK and in Estonia. As a Canadian some expressions was a challenge at first but I overcame this and soon was immersed into this excellent story and enjoyed every moment.

In brief: An excellent story, great characterization and well described settings. ( )
  Tigerpaw70 | Jan 29, 2024 |
OK... ( )
  fwbl | Oct 28, 2023 |
When you live in Europe, it is so easy to take exotic vacations. Of course, in this dark murder mystery the Estonian vacation ends in tragedy, and crime and exploitation also cross the borders easily. It's a bit complex, but I enjoyed it. ( )
  kvoldstad | Jun 6, 2022 |
I did not enjoy this one anywhere near previous books in this series. The first third or so was OK, however from that point on, it was, in a word, boring. ( )
  porte01 | Jan 25, 2021 |
Showing 1-5 of 48 (next | show all)
Among his other admirable qualities, Peter Robinson has a knack for adapting and even clarifying real-life crimes. The Paul Bernardo case was never so deeply explored as in Robinson’s 2001 novel Aftermath. In that book, DCI Alan Banks waded into a Yorkshire case with a set of facts much like those in the tortures and killings carried out by Ontario’s own Bernardo and Karla Homolka.

With Robinson’s new book, the crimes at the centre of the plot get us into the up-to-date evil of trafficking in illegal immigrants. As usual, Robinson slides into the book’s major business sideways, introducing the plot at the centre of the action by way of the mysterious murder of a veteran Yorkshire police inspector.

Banks’ investigation of the cop killing requires him to get a handle on Yorkshire-based commerce in migrant workers from Eastern Europe. The off-shore centre for these poor souls is the unlikely nation of Estonia, and that’s where Banks carries out most of his sleuthing.

The piecing together of the intricate case is mostly by-the-book stuff, a smart gathering of forensic evidence and countless interviews with a range of villains who aren’t as clever as they think they are. They’re definitely not as quick with the wits as Banks or his detective sidekick, the always appealing Annie Cabbot.

Robinson decorates the main narrative with plenty of personal interaction among the characters at Banks’s cop shop. Banks is feeling his fiftyish age, and turns petulant when an inspector from the Professional Standards unit is assigned to look over his shoulder throughout the case. Not even the intrusive inspector’s icy blond beauty softens the crabby Banks.

But some things never change for the DCI. At one perplexing point in Watching the Dark, he pours a glass of Malbec and puts on a CD by the English folksinger June Tabor. “He did his best thinking,” Robinson writes of Banks, “when he was listening to music and drinking wine.”
added by VivienneR | editThe Toronto Star, Jack Batten (Jan 21, 2013)
 
Robinson sounds many familiar notes in Watching The Dark, from Banks’ solo nightcaps with a drink in his hand and music playing on the stereo, to the DCI’s romantic yearnings for relationships akin to past loves like ex-wife Sandra, recent bygone paramour Sophia, and current colleague and now good friend DS Annie Cabbot. But the action plays out a little differently, thanks to a cop killed with a crossbow in the police rehab unit, mysterious photos that connect the dead man to a girl’s disappearance in Talinn, Estonia, and an icy blond policewoman whose job is investigating officers — and who, naturally, spars with Inspector Banks.

The fallacy of dinging an author, even mildly, for doing what he does best should be acknowledged here. After all, Robinson, who has earned his crime-writing stripes several times over, is still writing at a very high level, and one marvels at how he’s able to sustain that level of consistency with each subsequent book. That’s a bloody hard thing to do
added by VivienneR | editNational Post, Sarah Weinman (Sep 21, 2012)
 

» Add other authors (7 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Peter Robinsonprimary authorall editionscalculated
Boraso, MarinaTraductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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When Detective Inspector Bill Reid is found murdered, Chief Inspector Alan Banks, suspecting police corruption, handles the investigation with the utmost discretion until he discovers that Reid's murder is linked to the disappearance of a young English girl six years earlier.

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Haiku summary
Deaths and missing girl
Banks feels Estonia is key
Unraveling links
(hardboiled)

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