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Author Ruth Rendell dies aged 85


marylander1940
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Posted

Crime writer Ruth Rendell has died aged 85, her publisher says.

 

She wrote more than 60 novels in a career spanning 50 years, her best-known creation being Inspector Wexford, which was turned into a highly successful TV series.

 

Rendell, one of Britain's best-selling contemporary authors, also wrote under the pen-name Barbara Vine.

 

Born in Essex, she is credited with bringing a social and psychological dimension to crime fiction.

 

Publisher Penguin Random House said Rendell, who suffered a stroke in January, died in London on Saturday morning.

 

 

"We are devastated by the loss of one of our best-loved authors," the publisher said in a statement.

 

Penguin Random House chair, Baroness Gail Rebuck, said Rendell was admired throughout publishing for her "brilliant body of work".

 

"An insightful and elegant observer of society, many of her award-winning thrillers and psychological murder mysteries highlighted the causes she cared so deeply about."

 

Rendell's first Wexford book, From Doon with Death, was published in 1964, beginning a series of more than 20 starring Inspector Reginald Wexford, played in the TV series by George Baker.

 

Many of her works were translated into more than 20 languages and adapted for cinema and TV, attracting worldwide sales of 60 million.

 

http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-32564813

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Rendell

 

From my point of view the film "Live flesh" by Pedro Almodovar was the best adaptation of one of her novels.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_Flesh_(film)

 

Posted

Thanks for this. I'd already seen the news on Twitter earlier. I'm a big mystery/thriller aficionado, but didn't read my first book by Rendell until ten to fifteen years ago. I've since read a few in dribs and drabs until I read a whole bunch of her books, including most of the ones written under the pseudonym Barbara Vine, last October.

 

She will be missed, as will her friend, fellow mystery writer, and colleague in the House of Lords (though they were aligned with different political parties), P.D. (Phyllis Dorothy) James, who died last October.

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