The Vault – Ruth Rendell Free Audiobook
Description
Written by Ruth Rendell
Read by Nigel Anthony
Unabridged
Ruth Rendell is a marvel, and in the latest Inspector Wexford mystery she’s on cracking form . . . The book’s pacing is perfect. It starts gently as we, like Wexford, enjoy his new life of leisure. But once he puts his formidable brain to work, the violence kicks in. The result is a total page-turner – and one of Rendell’s very, very best novels. –A.N. Wilson, Reader’s Digest
The Vault sees Rendell for the first time marry the two genres she is master of: the psychological thriller and the police whodunit . . . With 60 novels put to page and still counting, Rendell will soon match the prolific output of Agatha Christie – who penned 66 works. It’s hard to imagine where the inspiration comes from, but find it she does – and there’s not a clue out of place or a shoehorned plotline in sight. –Time Out
Everything that is brilliant about Rendell’s writing is present in abundance in this novel: the vivid scene-setting, the knife-sharp social observations, the tiny telling details that contribute so powerfully to characterisation . . . Wexford’s status as a semi-outsider in relation to the case works brilliantly, adding a welcome new note while being just similar enough to previous Wexford novels to delight fans. Equally powerful is the subplot involving Wexford’s daughter Sylvia.
All in all, The Vault is an excellent addition to an incredibly impressive series. –Sunday Express
Ruth Rendell is bidding fair to join Defoe and Dickens in creating one of the great criminal cities of literature. Her view of London is a similar murderous topography, less squalid, but with the same tentacles reaching out between rich and poor . . . This mystery is also an enormously enjoyable panorama of London and a hymn of love to its Georgian houses . . . She, and Wexford are the sharpest modern observers of the “Great Wen” –Independent
The Vault, as a sort-of-sequel is a bold attempt to combine Rendell’s two chosen specialties: the police procedural and the psychological thriller. No one hides the clues better than her; no one else creates such a pervasive atmosphere of almost comic disgust and dread. The act of cross pollination proves most fruitful and triumphantly demonstrates that a vault, in addition to being an underground chamber, can also be a leap of imagination.
–Evening Standard
Now Wexford has retired, Rendell has spotted an opportunity to bring her two strands together in a superb novel called The Vault . . . the author’s sheer technical skill is evident as she effortlessly brings the original story up to date. Only a novelist whose characters feel intensely real to her could pull off such a coup, and Rendell’s relish in calling in Wexford to investigate suggests she hasn’t enjoyed herself so much for ages. –Sunday Times