Browse by category
Adam and Eve and Pinch Me by Ruth Rendell
$10.00 NZD
Category: Popular Fiction | Reading Level: very good
Collected Stories by Ruth Rendell
$10.00 NZD
Category: Popular Fiction | Reading Level: good
This title features three classic Ruth Rendell stories: "Means of Evil", "The Fallen Curtain" and "The Fever Tree". Ruth Rendell is unequalled in her ability to weave stories that challenge our preconceptions and prejudices, from Wexford and Burden's investigation of a wife's apparent suicide, with all ...Show more
Dark Corners by Ruth Rendell
$10.00 NZD
Category: Popular Fiction | Reading Level: very good
When Carl sells a box of slimming pills to his close friend Stacey, inadvertently causing her death, he sets in train a sequence of catastrophic events which begin with subterfuge, extend to lies, and culminate in murder. In Rendell's dark and atmospheric tale of psychological suspense, we encounter mis ...Show more
Master of the Moor by Ruth Rendell
$20.00 NZD
Category: Hardback fiction | Reading Level: very good
Stephen Whalby loves to walk the moor. It is a dark and forbidding place, but it is his. When the body of a young blonde woman is found there, her face horrifically disfigured, the victim of a merciless murderer, his beloved moor is tainted with suspicion and terror. Then a second woman goes missing on ...Show more
Talking to Strange Men by Ruth Rendell
$25.00 NZD
Category: Hardback fiction | Reading Level: very good
A lonely man stumbles into a dangerous game in this twisting novel of psychological suspense by the New York Times-bestselling author of The Crocodile Bird. In a desolate alley on the bank of the Thames, a spy slips through the shadows. Mungo is the Director General of English intelligence, and he kno ...Show more
The Tree of Hands by Ruth Rendell
$20.00 NZD
Category: Popular Fiction | Reading Level: very good
Edgar Award Finalist: In London, a missing child unites three mothers in grief, madness, and murder. When Benet Archdale was a young girl in North London, her mother, Mopsa, made her nervous. The woman was unsound, and posed ever-present dangers. Yet Benet understood her sickness and forgave her threa ...Show more
0 - 5 of 6