Exit Music is the seventeenth crime novel in the internationally bestselling Inspector Rebus series, written by Ian Rankin. It was published on 6 September 2007. The book is named after the Radiohead song "Exit Music (For a Film)".
Author | Ian Rankin |
---|---|
Language | English |
Series | Inspector Rebus |
Genre | Detective novel |
Publisher | Orion Books |
Publication date | 6 September 2007 |
Publication place | Scotland |
Media type | |
Pages | 496 |
ISBN | 978-0-7528-6860-8 |
OCLC | 122283613 |
Preceded by | The Naming of the Dead |
Followed by | Standing in Another Man's Grave |
Plot summary
editThe novel takes place on November 15-27, 2006; Rebus's last day in the Edinburgh CID is November 25. Rebus and Siobhan Clarke are investigating the death of a famous Russian exile poet who was mugged and beaten to death on King's Stables Road. Then a sound recordist with close ties to the dead Russian poet dies at home in an arson fire. Rebus discovers that the dead poet had eaten his last meal with the recordist, then had a drink with Morris Gerald Cafferty, Rebus's gangster nemesis, in a bar where Cafferty was meeting a Russian oligarch and a Labour official from the Scottish Parliament. Rebus finds Cafferty's hand in many schemes (drugs, abusive landlord practices), but the biggest ones involve real estate and are quite legitimate.
Meanwhile DS Siobhan Clarke, on the cusp of promotion to DI and given charge of the case, tries to find her own way, both dreading and looking forward to losing her mentor. She takes on a protégé of her own, a street cop from a family involved with petty crime, Todd Goodyear.
Rebus is suspended for insulting a powerful Scottish banker in the presence of the Chief Constable. He continues to pursue his hunches, however, often with Clarke's collusion. At one point he meets Cafferty alone; Cafferty is attacked immediately afterwards, and Rebus is carefully framed for it. On his last day on the job, however, Rebus succeeds in disentangling his suspicions and identifies the killers of the poet and the sound recordist. It takes him a little longer to discover who framed him for the attack on Cafferty.
Place in the Rebus Novels
editExit Music includes Rebus's retirement at the age of 60. Rankin had been looking forward to this event at least since 2000, when he commented in an interview that Rebus “lives in real time; he was 38 in Knots & Crosses and he's 52 now. He'll have to retire at 55.” [1] Rebus in fact postponed retirement until age 60 (November 2006), clinging to his job, although in the two previous books (Fleshmarket Close and The Naming of the Dead) he thought frequently about his upcoming retirement. Rankin appeared ambivalent about whether the book series would end with Rebus’s retirement; in a video clip, he says Exit Music “may be the final book” and offers two possible endings: Rebus kissed emphatically by (presumably) Siobhan Clarke, or Rebus stabbed mortally by a dying Cafferty. [2] The book’s actual ending is more ambivalent, a kind of anti-Reichenbach Falls in which Rebus resuscitates a dying Cafferty.[3]
In fact, Rankin did not publish another Rebus novel for five years; he continued to write about Edinburgh’s police, but with a new protagonist, Malcolm Fox, in two novels, The Complaints (2009) and The Impossible Dead (2011), before bringing Rebus back as a co-protagonist with Fox in Standing in Another Man's Grave (2012).
The character of Malcolm Fox, who is assigned to “the Complaints” or Internal Affairs investigating police corruption, is well-prepared for in Exit Music. Todd Goodyear, Siobhan’s enthusiastic disciple, provides both Rebus and Clarke with food for thought about how the police has changed since Rebus joined (and also since Clarke joined). Rebus began his career in a world where even good policemen lied on the witness stand to protect each other or, as in the Spaven case described in Black and Blue, to frame a likely culprit. To some extent, his maverick attitude has allowed him to steer clear of such situations and make his own moral decisions. On the other hand, many people (including Cafferty himself) assume that he is Cafferty’s tool. While Siobhan is very aware of the potential for corruption, she could never be part of the “brotherhood” and, with the advent of a more educated police force, the concept of “us against them” is foreign to her. Laura Severin comments,
[Siobhan’s] definition of herself is pragmatic rather than heroic and therefore not dependent on whether Cafferty lives or dies. This last scene [of Exit Music] illustrates that Rebus has an investment in a patriarchy structured around evil and good, while Clarke … is already an inhabitant of a postpatriarchal world more alert to social, cultural and political complexities. [4]
Fox will be pragmatic rather than heroic, and as an investigator even more outside the brotherhood of police detectives than Siobhan, as a woman officer.
Awards
editWon, ITV3 Crime Thriller Award for Author of the Year, 2008 (awarded to Ian Rankin).[5]
References
edit- ^ Pierce, K. Kingston (January 2000). "January interviews Ian Rankin: The Accidental Crime Writer". January Magazine.
- ^ Orion Books (6 August 2007). "Ian Rankin talks about Exit Music". In this video, Rankin says that Rebus was 40 in Knots and Crosses, the first book, whereas in the 2000 interview he said Rebus was 38 in that book.
- ^ Reviewers noted that the finality of Rebus’s retirement could always be modified: see Mark Lawson’s review of the “potentially final novel,” “Retirement Present.” The Guardian Sept. 8 2007. See also Janet Maslin, “Scottish Detective Goes Off Into the Heather. Is He Over the Hill?,” New York Times Sept. 14, 2008.
- ^ Laura Severin, “’Out from the Mentor’s Shadow’: Siobhan Clarke and the Feminism of Ian Rankin’s Exit Music,” Clues: A Journal of Detection 28.2, Fall 2010, pp. 92-93.
- ^ Allen, Katie (6 October 2008). "Rankin and P D James pick up ITV3 awards". theBookseller.com. Archived from the original on 9 April 2009. Retrieved 6 October 2008.