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Tree Of Hands

a compulsive and darkly compelling psychological thriller from the award winning Queen of Crime,...

Ruth Rendell

$25

Paperback

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English
Arrow
05 July 1994
A psychological thriller about three mothers bound by a thread of terror, from the world's best living mystery writer and author of bestselling crime fiction including Thirteen Steps Down.

A psychological thriller about three mothers bound by a thread of terror from multi-million copy and SUNDAY TIMES bestselling author Ruth Rendell. Readers of PD James, Ann Cleeves and Donna Leon will be hooked...

'Rendell's psychological novels remain in a class of their own' -- Sunday Telegraph 'The web is spun with fiendish skill' -- Observer 'Domestic dramas exploding into deaths and murders...threads are drawn tightly together in a lethal last pattern' -- Sunday Times 'A cleverly written and intriguing book' --
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* Reader review 'Ruth Rendell at the height of her powers. This book really merits the description- ""unputdownable.""' --
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* Reader review 'Allow time to read this as you won't want to put it down' --
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* Reader review 'Compulsive reading - I couldn't put it down' --
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* When Benet was about fourteen, she and her mother had been alone in a train carriage - and Mopsa had tried to stab her with a carving knife.

It has been some time since Benet had seen her psychologically disturbed mother. So when Mopsa arrives at the airport looking drab and colourless in a dowdy grey suit, Benet tries not to hate her.

But when the tragic death of a child begins a chain of deception, kidnap and murder in which three women are pushed to psychological extremes, family ties are strained to the absolute limit...
By:  
Imprint:   Arrow
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 110mm,  Spine: 17mm
Weight:   147g
ISBN:   9780099434702
ISBN 10:   0099434709
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Ruth Rendell has written over 50 bestselling novels and has won many awards in the course of her career. In 1996 she was awarded the CBE, and in 1997 was made a Life Peer. She lives in London.

Reviews for Tree Of Hands: a compulsive and darkly compelling psychological thriller from the award winning Queen of Crime, Ruth Rendell

Several of the favorite Rendell themes - madness, suffocating family ties, real estate, ironically overlapping crimes - come together in this firmly intriguing (if ultimately half-satisfying) anatomy of a child-kidnapping. In a posh part of London, unwed mother Benet Archdale, a youngish bestselling novelist, is grieving over the recent death of her four-year-old son - while receiving a trying visit from her mother Mopsa, a genteel madwoman (supposedly now cured). Meanwhile, in a dreary blue-collar London neighborhood, barmaid Carol Stratford, a tough young widow with three kids, is being sweetly doted upon by her very young live-in boyfriend Barry - who doesn't quite realize that Carol is a child-beater (and a tramp). The connection between the two stories? Crazy mum Mopsa, though herself utterly unaffected by her grandson's death, casually kidnaps Carol's wee son Jason and brings him home as a consoling stand-in for Benet - who is first unaware, then horrified (and uncharmed by dopey Jason), then intent on returning the boy. . . but eventually drawn to the notion of giving Jason (an obviously abused child) a permanent new home and mother. Still: won't the police track Jason to Mopsa (who has by now been shipped back to her Spain retirement-home) or to Benet? No, not at all: their prime suspect is poor innocent Barry - who himself wrongly suspects Carol's ex-lover Terry Wand, a sleazy gigolo in the midst of an audacious real-estate scam. And all these strands - plus Carol's promiscuity and a blackmail-attempt by Benet's ex-lover - will become a wry criss-cross towards the end, with two deaths, two fugitive-flights, and several arrests packed into the last few pages. True, this finale doesn't work nearly as well as some other Rendell windups: a minor, indistinct character plays far too important a role. Elsewhere, too, Rendell displays her slightly excessive fondness for contrivance and coincidence. But much of this warm yet chilling tale offers Rendell at her very best: the crisply textured characters, the modern-London atmosphere, the finely controlled mixture of creepiness and pathos - and the nearly-unrivaled gift for plain, beguiling storytelling. (Kirkus Reviews)


  • Winner of CWA Silver Dagger for Fiction 1984
  • Winner of CWA Silver Dagger for Fiction 1984.

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