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THE COPPER PEACOCK by Ruth Rendell

THE COPPER PEACOCK

And Other Stories

by Ruth Rendell

Pub Date: Oct. 1st, 1991
ISBN: 0099928302

Nine new short stories from the prolific, impressive Rendell—but an underpar batch this time, with no top-notch entries and quite a few clinkers. Many of the pieces here begin seductively, with an arresting Rendell character-sketch or psychological situation, only to peter out disappointingly. "Paperwork" has a fine gothic setup—girl raised by cold grandparents in a great manse—that goes nowhere. The title story, about a writer's snobbish attitude toward a cleaning-woman, shifts awkwardly from subtle insight to unconvincing melodrama. Two items—the Maugham-manque. "Dying Happy," the Roald Dahl-ish "The Fish-Sitter"—are barely more than anecdotes. Only two stories offer solid, if obvious, suspense: the creepy "Mother's Help," about a straying husband's homicidal use of his precocious children; and "An Unwanted Woman," in which Wexford and Burden (Rendell's regular sleuths) investigate the suicide of a lonely widow who had recently befriended a teenage runaway. Lesser work from a major talent; readable but unpersuasive.