• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to footer

Crime Books

Prize-Winning Fiction

  • Home
  • Reference
    • Awards
    • Blogs
    • Reading List
      • The Best of The Best
      • International Crime
      • The Last Laugh
  • Index
    • Authors
    • Titles
    • Tags
  • E-Mail Updates
  • Search
  • Rating
    • ★ 5 Stars
    • ★ 4 Stars
    • ★ 3 Stars
    • ★ 2 Stars
    • ★ 1 Star
    • ★ Not Rated
  • Genre
    • Caper
    • Espionage
    • Historic
    • Legal Drama
    • Locked Room
    • Mystery
    • Police Procedural
    • Private Detective
  • Style
    • Cosy
    • Hard-Boiled
    • humorous
    • Literary
    • Narrative
    • Noir
    • Psychological
    • Pulp
    • Thriller
  • Region
    • British
    • European
    • Japanese
    • Nordic
    • North American
  • Era
    • Early 20th Century
      • 1900s
      • 1910s
      • 1920s
    • Mid 20th Century
      • 1930s
      • 1940s
      • 1950s
      • 1960s
    • Late 20th Century
      • 1970s
      • 1980s
      • 1990s
    • Early 21st Century
      • 2000s
      • 2010s
      • 2020s
  • Best Crime Fiction

Ian Rankin

Recommended Reading

Three of Ian Rankin’s books to try:

Dead Souls Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Dead Souls: Winner of the French 2005 Grand Prix de Littérature Policière — Étrangèr. Rankin’s Inspector Rebus faces the consequences of his actions after revealing the name of a paedophile to the press. (Review)

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.
Dark Entries Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Dark Entries: Rankin’s only graphic novel to date was illustrated by Werther Dell’Edera. A supernatural thriller in which a contestant in a horror reality game show meets an unscripted death. (Notes)

Witch Hunt Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Witch Hunt: An early Rankin novel published in 1993 under the pseudonym Jack Harvey. Interpol is hunting for “Witch”,  a female terrorist assassin who they believe is planning to murder a world leader in London. (Notes)

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 5 out of 5.
Ian Rankin

Image by Tim Duncan

Biography

Ian Rankin was born in Cardenden, a former mining town in Fife, in 1960 where his father owned the local grocery store, and his mother worked in the school canteen.

Escaping Fife

As a six-year-old, Rankin claimed he could see hope draining out of the town as the colliery was gradually abandoned. He and his friends nicknamed the town “Car Dead End”, and Rankin escaped through films and books.

“I was too young to get into R-rated movies, like The Godfather or One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest or A Clockwork Orange, even at ages 11 or 12 nobody stopped me buying the books on which those movies were based. So I was finding a sideways or sneaky way to experience all of these intriguing stories, and loving them.” (January Magazine)

In 1979, Rankin left his home town to study Literature at Edinburgh University. After graduating, Rankin went on to study for a PhD. examining the works of the novelist Muriel Spark. He didn’t complete it but wrote three novels instead. The third of these, Knots and Crosses, featured a police detective called John Rebus and was published in 1987.

“When I wrote my first crime novel, I was doing a PhD. in Scottish literature at Edinburgh University. I went to the university’s writer-in-residence, a guy called Allan Massie, and said, “I seem to have accidentally written a crime novel, while striving to write literature.” He said, “Don’t worry about it. Do you think John Buchan ever worried about whether he was writing literature or not?” (The Guardian)

Aspiring Author

For the next ten years, Ian Rankin plugged away at his dream of becoming a novelist, living in both London and then in rural France. He subsidised his ambition by working as an alcohol researcher, grape picker, hi-fi journalist and swineherd. During that time, he continued to churn out John Rebus novels, plus a handful of short stories and standalone thrillers (often writing as Jack Harvey).

“The Harveys were big, fat airport-type thrillers: you’d buy one for a flight and you’d chuck it away at the other end. But they kind of let me go off the leash a little bit and let me do things that I couldn’t do in the Rebus books.” (January Magazine)

Despite his efforts, making a living as a novelist was an uphill battle.

“I remember going into a bookshop in Edinburgh in about 1992, and they had none of my books on the shelves. I walked up to a member of staff and said, “How come you’ve not got any of Ian Rankin’s books?” And he said, “Oh, he’s just not very popular.” It made me more bloody-minded than ever.” (The Guardian)

Rankin eventually got his big break in 1997 when he won the CWA Gold dagger for his eighth Rebus novel, Black and Blue. The book was also shortlisted for the Edgar award for best crime fiction novel in the US.

Since then, Rankin’s Rebus novels have sold over thirty million copies and have been translated into more than thirty languages.

John Rebus

Most of Ian Rankin’s books feature the dour, stubborn Detective Inspector John Rebus. The name John came from the fictional detective John Shaft (one of Rankin’s childhood heroes), and Rebus is a picture puzzle (think dingbats) that Rankin came up with when he was “a smart-arse PhD student”.

Much of Rebus’s personal history as a Fife-born ex-soldier turned police officer is based on Rankin’s experiences.

 “In that part of Fife, where the mines had all closed down and unemployment was bad, if you weren’t “clever” enough to go to university, your job options were pretty limited. A lot of my friends went into the army or went into the police.” (January Magazine)

Like Lawrence Block’s Matt Scudder, Rankin decided to let Rebus age in real-time. Consequently, in the 2007 novel Exit Music, Rebus retires from the force, though he continues to help Rankin’s later protagonist Malcolm Fox.

The two characters initially butt heads when Fox, an officer within Police Complaints, investigates Rebus for corruption and not following the correct procedures. Rankin points out that a book where the protagonist followed the proper procedures would be far from a best seller.

“No police procedural is ever realistic. A realistic police procedural would be the most boring book in the world, because police investigation is tedious and police officers are all tiny cogs in the machine; they never even get to see the whole investigation through from start to finish.” (January Magazine)

True Crime

In addition to writing fiction, Ian Rankin has toyed with true crime. In 2005 he presented a 30-minute documentary on BBC Four called Rankin on the Staircase, in which he discussed the relationship between crime fiction and real-life cases with authors including James Ellroy, Minette Walters and P.D. James.

Three years earlier, whilst making a series for Channel Four about the nature of evil, Rankin was invited to meet the moors murderer, Ian Brady, but passed it up.

“The director was very excited… I said, ‘No fucking way am I letting him inside my head.’ Because you can’t unmeet him. I knew he played tricks – he had nothing left to do but play mind games with his victims, and the family of his victims.” (The New Statesman)

It appears that some lines aren’t worth crossing for the sake of a good book.

Read more at the author’s website.

Ian Rankin’s Books

Dead Souls Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Dead Souls

Review

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.
Dark Entries Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Dark Entries

Notes

Witch Hunt Ian Rankin
Get a Copy

Witch Hunt

Notes

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Try Another Author

Cameron McCabe

Cameron McCabe

Johan Theorin

Johan Theorin

Joël Dicker

Joël Dicker

Philip Kerr

Philip Kerr

Jørn Lier Horst

Jørn Lier Horst

Donald E Westlake

Donald E Westlake

Pierre Lemaitre

Pierre Lemaitre

Stephen Leather

Stephen Leather

Dominique Manotti

Dominique Manotti

Lawrence Block

Lawrence Block

P.D. James

P.D. James

Ross Thomas

Ross Thomas

Iceberg Slim

Iceberg Slim

Sara Lövestam

Sara Lövestam

G.K. Chesterton

G.K. Chesterton

Mick Herron

Mick Herron

Anthony Price

Anthony Price

Roslund and Hellström

Roslund and Hellström

Patricia Highsmith

Patricia Highsmith

Ellis Peters

Ellis Peters

Martin Cruz Smith

Martin Cruz Smith

Arnaldur Indriðason

Arnaldur Indriðason

Fred Vargas

Fred Vargas

John Grisham

John Grisham

Joe Gores

Joe Gores

Hannelore Cayre

Hannelore Cayre

Val McDermid

Val McDermid

Tove Alsterdal

Tove Alsterdal

John Dickson Carr

John Dickson Carr

Roberto Perrone

Roberto Perrone

J.K. Rowling / Robert Galbraith

Robert Galbraith

S.G. MacLean

S G MacLean

Charles Willeford

Charles Willeford

William L DeAndrea

William L. DeAndrea

Martina Cole

Martina Cole

Henning Mankell

Henning Mankell

Hideo Yokoyama

Hideo Yokoyama

Peter Lovesey

Peter Lovesey

Georges Simenon

Georges Simenon

Andy McNab

Andy McNab

Steve Cavanagh

Steve Cavanagh

Volker Kutscher

Volker Kutscher

Natsuo Kirino

Natsuo Kirino

Peter May

Peter May

Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie

Ian Rankin

Ian Rankin

Ruth Rendell

Rith Rendell

Zoran Drvenkar

Zoran Drvenkar

Raymond Chandler

Raymond Chandler

Chris Whitaker

Chris Whitaker

Elly Griffiths

Elly Griffiths

James Lee Burke

James Lee Burke

Peter James

Peter James

Dominique Sylvain

Dominique Sylvain

Donna Leon

Donna Leon

Share this:

Subscribe via e-mail


This site contains sponsored links. I receive a small commission if you buy a book after visiting a link.
This doesn’t affect the price you pay. Click here to learn more.


Footer

Follow

  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • goodreads
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Reviews

  • Killed in the Ratings
  • A Time of Predators
  • The Darkest Room
  • Dead Souls
  • The Incredulity of Father Brown
  • Dark Winter

Best Crime Fiction

Who are the best crime fiction authors? Enter your e-mail address in the box below to find out.

Affiliate Links · Contact · Site Map · Privacy Policy · Log In

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use. To find out more, read the Privacy PolicyOK