The Girl Next Door (Rendell novel)

The Girl Next Door is a novel by British crime authorRuth Rendell which is published in 2014. It was the last of her novels published in her lifetime.[1]

First edition (publ. Hutchinson)

Plot and characters

During World War II, a group of children in Loughton, Essex, United Kingdom, which is where Rendell herself grew up, play in tunnels (in reality, the foundations of an uncompleted house) they discovered under a hill. In the present day they are reunited after the discovery of two hands in a tin box when the tunnels are dug up for construction work.[2] The novel deals frankly with changes and interrelationships of the characters and social changes generally, over seven decades.

Critical reception

In a review in The Observer, it was noted that instead of focusing on the crime, the novel dealt with the lives of the now elderly people in the present.[3]

In Marilyn Stasio's review for the NewYork Times, the novel's effective use of a split time frame was noted.[4]

gollark: In an ideal world, you would just tell haskell what you want and it would produce a beautiful codebase for you to marvel at, then compile ultra-optimized platform machine code for whatever you want.
gollark: Or osmarks staticicitity™.
gollark: And yet they use Haskell. Curious.
gollark: https://duckdns.org/
gollark: It's fine if you don't care about performance, like haskellers.

References


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