The Rottweiler
by Ruth Rendell
Woman With a Loaded Gun
A review by Charles Taylor
Years from now, an aspiring cartographer may attempt a map of 20th century London
using only Ruth Rendell's novels as a reference point. James Joyce said he hoped
Ulysses
would allow the reader to reproduce a street-by-street map of Dublin. Rendell's
work might only produce individual pockets, instead of the city as a whole. But
those tucked-away sections of London could be rendered down to the cracks in the
sidewalk, the grime on some windows, the flower boxes in front of others.
The self-containment of these individual neighborhoods is the point. The secrets
that Rendell's characters clutch to their chests, like Fagin hoarding his most
precious treasures under his grimy greatcoat, are hidden in quiet neighborhoods,
placid streets, rambling old houses. The London of the 1960s in The
House of Stairs and of the 1980s in King
Solomon's Carpet (one of her books that can reasonably be called a masterpiece)
have the nocturnal ominousness of Gothic novels set in the city a hundred years
earlier.
"The park is deserted by night. That is, the intention is that it should
be deserted," Rendell writes of a private enclave in a small London neighborhood
in her 1996 The
Keys to the Street."No vagrant could sleep undisturbed under the lee
of the pavillions or the bandstand, but the police cannot search everywhere
every night. The canal bank remains as a place of concealment amid the wide
green spaces, and, in summer, the long grass under the trees." Does that
passage describe an enchanted refuge? Or, since the small private park is inhabited
by both the homeless and the killer impaling them on the park's spiked fence,
something more sinister? And why can't it be both?
Ruth Rendell is not an either-or writer. She takes a grim view of human nature,
which does not preclude empathy for her characters. Not for Rendell the cold,
rancid misanthropy of the perpetually overrated Patricia Highsmith. The 61 books
Rendell has written in the 40 years since her first, From
Doon With Death, appeared -- they include the Inspector
Wexford series, stand-alone mysteries like her new The Rottweiler,
the 11 novels she has written under the pseudonym Barbara
Vine, and seven short-story collections -- are about obsession. The subject
is coolly observed in the Rendell books, and almost feverishly in the Vine books.
To render obsession successfully you need to be, if not wholly sympathetic to
the obsessed, at least aware of how they willingly make themselves look foolish.
The paranoid states to which her characters are so susceptible would not rouse
our anxiety so strongly if Rendell weren't able to pull us into some sense of
complicity with them.
I don't mean to make Rendell seem a softer writer than she is. She can pass
judgments withering enough to make you cringe, like these lines from A
Judgement in Stone: "'Norm and I always longed for kiddies,' she was
in the habit of saying, 'but they never came. The Lord knew best, no doubt,
and it's not for us to question His ways.' No doubt He did. One wonders what
Joan Smith would have done with children if she had had them. Eaten them, perhaps."
Rendell's sensibility lies somewhere between the Gothic and the very sick joke.
The kicker that awaits at the end of Rendell's The
Bridesmaid, the apotheosis of the book's morbid romanticism, is so flesh-crawling
that it would make Emily Brontė laugh in sheer admiration. Newsday critic
Gene Seymour recently observed, in discussing Rendell's latest Inspector Wexford
novel, The
Babes in the Woods, that she isn't mellowing. If anything, Seymour said,
she has become one of those people who has no inhibitions about saying exactly
what she believes people to be.
Among mystery readers and writers, Rendell would come very close to the top
in any poll asking who is the best working writer in the field. But the devastating
precision of her prose also earns her a place among the best English social
novelists of this century and the last. That's a wide list, including writers
as disparate in temperament and style as Angus
Wilson, Isabel
Colegate, Elizabeth
Taylor, Rose
MacAulay, Mary
Wesley, Jonathan
Coe, Margaret
Drabble, Alan
Hollinghurst and Shirley
Hazzard. No one, for instance, has written a better book about the stifling
propriety of mid-century English middle-class life than A
Dark-Adapted Eye (a Barbara Vine novel).
There will always be detractors who claim that Rendell does not transcend the
mantle of clever mystery writer. But what then do they do with the first sentence
of A Judgement in Stone: "Eunice Parchman killed the Coverdale family
because she could not read or write." As the novelist Val
McDermid has pointed out, that is an absolutely radical sentence. If this
is a mystery novel, then how do we account for the fact that Rendell starts
the book by giving away the murderer, the victim and the motive?
The revelation of the killer's identity midway through The Rottweiler
-- the title is taken from the tabloid monicker for the book's killer, named
for the bite mark on the first victim's neck -- is not a radical move. In fact,
it fits very neatly into Alfred Hitchcock's opposition of surprise and suspense.
The premise -- a serial killer murdering young women in the Lisson Grove section
of London, taking items from them as souvenirs, items that turn up amid the
bric-a-brac in a neighborhood antique shop -- could almost be the setup for
the sort of Charlie Chan conclusion when the detective assembles all the suspects
in a room and unmasks the killer. Who will it be? Inez, the widow who owns the
antique shop? Zeinab, Inez's drop-dead gorgeous assistant, who is keeping two
rich suitors dangling while happily receiving their pricey tributes? Or the
tenants who reside in the building Inez owns -- the mentally retarded laborer,
the beautifully mannered young businessman, or the oft-married Russian beauty
and her nosy paramour?
I hate to say that Rendell disdains genre convention or "transcends the
genre." That would imply that the form she's working in is by its very
nature unworthy, and only hacks work for 40 years in a form they disrespect.
But genre is not the only way to explore the anxiety and deception that is Rendell's
subject, and while she delivers the narrative satisfactions of mystery, she
also, in The Rottweiler, tweaks the form.
No brilliant inspector will assemble the suspects at the climax of this book
for the very simple reason that the detectives on the case are fools. Rendell's
contempt for the ham-fisted senior detective is shown by her giving him the
same surname as that of England's most notorious wife killer, and his subordinate
is a young up-and-comer who thinks himself terribly clever because he has a
psychology degree. Of course, the suspect he definitely eliminates is the killer.
Inez, along with her co-workers, tenants and friends, are this novel's version
of the self-contained community found in most Rendell books, a community in
which each member has his or her secret, from the mundane to the deadly. In
Rendell's black comedies of manners, the subject is the public consequences
of private deception, what results from the crossed wires and mixed signals
that connect the characters to each other. Rendell is a master of the tires-on-ice
moment, the moment when the intersecting elements begin their inexorable slide
into calamity, or at least to the collapse of the characters' various carefully
maintained facades.
The ease with which Rendell gets into the mind of the killer, the contrast
between the placid surface and the roiling substrata of criminal derangement,
is the very thing that makes her books so unnerving. (Next to the horrendous
plausibility of Rendell's murderers, the fethishized mastermind serial killers
found in the work of Thomas Harris and his imitators look like the funhouse
dummies they are.) The murderer in The Rottweiler has been given a Freudian
motive that is unusually pedestrian for Rendell, but she has also provided a
trigger for his murderous impulses that verges on the baroque.
But the thoughts of the "normal" characters in Rendell's novels can
be just as uncomfortable, in all kinds of ways. There's a queasy poignancy to
Inez's solitude; she spends her evenings watching videos of the television cop
show her late husband starred in. The sections involving Will, Inez's mentally
handicapped tenant, and the aunt who tries to care for him, are the book's most
resonant and discomforting. Will's aunt, Becky, is caught in the trap many good
people find themselves in: She's conscious of her duty to her nephew as his
only living relative, but she has the perfectly reasonable desire not to give
up her own life. The guilt Becky feels over that conflict is, at moments, almost
intolerable. Rendell doesn't provide an out. She presents Becky's dilemma as
exactly the quiet, enduring nightmare many of us fear caring for a loved one
will become.
The Rottweiler is not Rendell at her deepest, and her conjuring powers
are more potent elsewhere (particularly in the best of the Barbara Vine books).
Someone just starting Rendell might do better by beginning with A Judgement
in Stone (an attack on both ignorance and sophistication, the book turns
into a live grenade in your hands, attacking the cultured sensibility that allows
you to enjoy it in the first place), the wicked comeuppance tale A
Sight for Sore Eyes, the Vine books A Dark-Adapted Eye or King
Solomon's Carpet, or one of the Inspector Wexfords. But The Rottweiler
is another brick in a body of work that constitutes one of the most precise
and unflinching contributions to contemporary English fiction.
Rendell, the craftsman of intricate, ingenious plots, the purveyor of chilly,
black-humored explorations of the squirmier parts of the psyche, is also one
of modern fiction's few true moralists. "'She would of been a good woman,'
The Misfit said, 'if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of
her life.'" That's the killer in Flannery O'Connor's A
Good Man Is Hard to Find speaking of an old woman he's just shot. Rendell
lies in wait for all her characters, like the cocked and loaded gun they were
never fortunate enough to run into.
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