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Best of Portland 2009

Masterful mysteries

Rendell and Nabb transcend genre
By CHARLES TAYLOR  |  June 10, 2008

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SWAN SONG: Nabb’s own death shadows the final installment of the Guarnaccia series.

Not in the Flesh | By Ruth Rendell | Crown | 320 pages | $25.95

Vita Nuova | By Magdalen Nabb | Soho | 272 pages | $24

Not in the Flesh is Ruth Rendell’s 21st Inspector Wexford novel since she and the character debuted in 1964. In that time, she has also published 23 stand-alone novels, seven collections of short stories, two novellas, and 12 novels as “Barbara Vine.” And if anything, Rendell, who is now 78, is one of those artists to whom age has brought greater clarity and sharpness to a moral vision that was pitiless to begin with. It’s with good reason that John Mortimer’s line (“If it weren’t for a ridiculous literary snobbery about ‘crime writing,’ Ruth Rendell would be acclaimed as one of our most important novelists”) is often quoted by her admirers.

Rendell is too fine a writer and has, you feel, simply seen too much of human behavior to coddle anyone’s sense of niceties. Although the finish of some of her novels (notably A Sight for Sore Eyes and The Bridesmaid) can seem as if O. Henry has donned death’s own shroud, Rendell does not work the grisly side of the street. What’s grotesque in her work is the pettiness and vanity and hypocrisy of people, and the way those small sins often slide effortlessly into the commission of larger ones. Rendell is a moralist, not a nihilist. She refuses to pretend shock, but that doesn’t mean that she is incapable of being appalled.

In the past few Wexford novels, Rendell’s complete lack of hesitation in saying what people are has seemed to parallel her inspector’s increased impatience, a quality less to do with the crankiness of age than with the accumulation of experience. (Reading Wexford’s dubiousness toward a fantasy novel he’s told he won’t be able to put down reminded me of a stormy winter morning years ago in a Harvard Square bookshop. Some twit, oblivious that some of us still had to go to work, came in and chirped, “What a wonderful day to stay in and re-read The Hobbit!” Miraculously, she left the store alive.) Not in the Flesh gets a good, classic start for a mystery novel: a pensioner who pulls in some extra money truffle hunting with his dog stumbles on a long-buried corpse. Wexford and the rest of the Kinsgmarkham police squad (his natty, somewhat provincial partner Mike Burden; the younger, tiresomely PC Hannah Goldsmith, to name the most prominent) investigate. And as always, the people they encounter are so plausible that part of your brain feels compelled to protest that they could be part of the human race.

Of course, the strength of Rendell’s writing is that there’s no denying it. Her withering eye can border on the cruel. The grotesquerie of watching a younger home-care worker flounce and fuss over his elderly charge comes from our knowledge that this woman’s blinkered self-satisfaction has already impeded knowledge of one death. Rendell makes us recoil from her pampered treatment, as if we were seeing ignorance itself being rewarded. At moments like this, Rendell becomes something like the anti-Dickens. Dickens’s caricatures were so outsized they burst the bounds of their characters. Rendell’s portraits are so particularized we are aware we’re encountering a type of pettiness (or pride, greed, etc.) that shrinks the very notion of what it means to be human. Luckily, the same cannot be said of Rendell’s cool revulsion. Her body of work is that of someone who has been nagged by the question of what it means to be human, and the conviction that we should be able to do better.

Magadlen Nabb’s carabiniere sleuth Marshal Salvatore Guarnaccia is someone who has been able to do better. Guarnaccia is a classic example of the person driven to police work by empathy. In Nabb’s Florence-set series, Guarnaccia’s investigations provide him with a way to do what you feel he wants to do anyway: know the people under his care. It’s no coincidence that many of the books include scenes where Guarnaccia listens to and soothes the real or imagined fears of some worried pensioner.

What buoys Guarnaccia throughout the series is his wife, Teresa, and their two sons. Teresa and the boys are away in Vita Nuova, the 13th Guarnaccia mystery, setting the marshal adrift. And that only contributes to the melancholy with which Nabb’s admirers, like myself, approach this book. Nabb died this past August in Florence at the far-too-young age of 60. That knowledge haunts the central section of the book when Guarnaccia, investigating a murder that leads into evidence of human trafficking, uncovers knowledge of high corruption that may well finish his career. There’s never any real question about whether the marshal will pursue his case. But the pages where he worries about the consequences and calculates the possibility of providing for his family on his pension all contribute to the disquieting sensation of encountering tremors in the most stable of men. Guarnaccia, the Sicilian who has settled in Florence, who has endured periods away from his beloved Teresa, is one of those men born without a wandering soul, someone who flourishes in settled ground.

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