Entire Rebus Collection and Other Novels - Ian Rankin
E book under: Mystery/Suspense Ebook
Tags: ,

Shared by:jason98

Entire Rebus Collection and Other Novels - Ian Rankin

Written by Ian Rankin
Format(s): MOBI
Language: English

#1. Rebus: Knots & Crosses; And in Edinburgh of all places. I mean, you never think of that sort of thing happening in Edinburgh, do you...?\' \'That sort of thing\' is the brutal abduction and murder of two young girls. And now a third is missing, presumably gone to the same sad end. Detective Sergeant John Rebus, smoking and drinking too much, his own young daughter spirited away south by his disenchanted wife, is one of many policemen hunting the killer. And then the messages begin to arrive: knotted string and matchstick crosses - taunting Rebus with pieces of a puzzle only he can solve.

#2 Rebus: Hide & Seek: At night the summer sky stays light over Edinburgh. But in a shadowy, crumbling housing development, a junkie lies dead of an overdose, his bruised body surrounded by signs of Satanic worship. John Rebus could call the death and accident--but won\'t. Instead, he tracks down a violent-tempered young woman who knew the dead boy and heard him cry out his terrifyng last words: \"Hide! Hide!\" Now, with the help of a bright, conflicted young detective, Rebus is following the girl through a brutal world of bad deals, bad dope and bad company. From a beautiful city\'s darkest side to the private sanctums of the upper crust, Rebus is seeking the perfect hiding place for a killer.

#3 Rebus: Tooth & Nail: Scottish homicide detective John Rebus has been sent from \"North of the Border\" to help London police catch a serial killer with a gruesome M.O. Teamed with a London cop he wants to trust but can\'t, Rebus lets a beautiful psychologist into the case develops a bizarre portrait of a killer who leaves bite marks and tears on each victim\'s body. Now it\'s only a question of who is going to get busted first: the cop with the accent who breaks all the rules--or the pyscho painting London with blood...

#4 Rebus: Strip Jack: A return to Edinburgh and its sturdy police force, focusing again on Detective Inspector John Rebus (Knobs and Crosses, 1988; Watchman, 1991) as he now tries to solve the murder of Liz Jack- -only child of mogul Sir Hugh Ferrie; wife of respected Member of Parliament Gregor Jack; and, in her well-hidden private life, centerpiece of wild weekends at Deer Lodge, her isolated cottage. Jack himself seemed uninvolved in those activities but had recently been caught in a well-publicized raid on a brothel that--to Rebus, anyway--looked like a set-up. As his superiors try to make a case against a local drifter, Rebus struggles through red herrings, false alibis, secret liaisons, and his own arid emotions until, aided by sharp-eyed sidekick Brian Holmes, he nails his quarry. A solidly absorbing procedural--all enlivened by a succession of offbeat characters and by the author\'s eccentric but appealing narrative style.

#5 Rebus: The Black Book: With this latest action-packed adventure of Edinburgh\'s Inspector John Rebus, Rankin steps into the company of accomplished fellow British procedural writers John Harvey and Peter Turnbull. Events lead the inspector to consider the \"black comedy\" of his life. His ex-con brother arrives in town just as Rebus, blown off by his doctor ladyfriend, returns to his own pad where, surrounded by his student tenants, he has to sleep on the couch. He is similarly buffeted on the professional front: a colleague is brained at a restaurant owned by an Elvis enthusiast; a man is stabbed in a butcher shop; a convicted child molester returns to the city; the bullet that killed an unknown man five years ago was fired from a gun that Rebus has unwisely and unwittingly purchased. With the addition of missing vans, a kidnapped man left hanging upside down from a railway bridge, good beer and protection money, Rankin offers about four times as much plot here as in his earlier Strip Jack. This tale is, however, only twice as good, as Rankin tries to resolve everything at the conclusion. A loose end or two never hurt a good crime yarn. Just ask Raymond Chandler.

#6 Rebus: Mortal Causes: In Edinburgh you\'re never far from a peaceful spot, or from a hellish one either. Now, in the heart of summer, in the midst of a nationalist festival, Inspector John Rebus is on the murder case of a young man left hanging in a spot where his screams would never be heard. To find the victim\'s identity--and his killer--Rebus searches from Edinburgh\'s most violent neighborhood to Belfast, Northern Ireland--amongst petty thugs, gunrunners, and heavyweight criminals. But before Rebus can get to the truth, he\'s bloodied by the dream of society\'s madmen--and staring into the glint of a killer\'s eyes.

#7 Rebus: Let It Bleed: At the start of Rankin\'s powerful and absorbing latest tale, Edinburgh Detective Inspector John Rebus (Mortal Causes, etc.) looks on helplessly as two young kidnapping suspects avoid capture by diving to their deaths from the icy Forth Road Bridge. Unable to drink away that image, Rebus must investigate another suicide. Ex-con \"Wee Shug\" McAnally shotgunned himself as local government councilor Tom Gillespie watched in horror. Rebus believes that McAnally chose his witness carefully, but when political higher-ups pressure the police brass, Rebus is forced off the inquiry. Pursuing his hunches with covert help from sympathetic colleagues, Rebus tries to decipher a document that might connect the suicides to development plans for \"Silicon Glen,\" home of Edinburgh\'s computer industry. His suspicions increase when influential Scots hint at rewards if he\'ll let the case slide. Rebus sorts out these machinations while battling loneliness, toothache (it figures in the solution), alienation from his daughter and the tense reappearance of a former lover, Gill Templer, as his new boss. Rankin portrays an intriguingly complex Scotland, where a good copper, battling frigid winds and cruel manipulators, needs plenty of warming whiskey and selfless friends.

#8 Rebus: Black & Blue: Nearly 30 years after a serial killer dubbed Bible John abruptly retired after three vicious murders, he\'s back in the news again. Johnny Bible, an equally perverted killer who seems to be much younger, is imitating him with a gusto that suggests close research. Even though he knew one of Johnny Bible\'s victims, Edinburgh\'s Inspector John Rebus is in no position to take on this new case; he\'s got his hands full with a murdered oil-rig painter and the threatened reopening of a case in which he and his mentor, Inspector Lawson Geddes, may have planted evidence years and years ago that framed Lenny Spaven, who went to his death insisting he was innocent. When Rebus takes a few days in Aberdeen to visit the oil company\'s headquarters and incidentally chat up the locals about another of Johnny Bible\'s victims, he ends up under suspicion of killing a fourth victim himself and gets stuck with a minder who\'ll report his every move back to the very same Chief Inspector who\'s been put in charge of the Spaven case. Can things get any worse? Of course they can. For even though Rebus is behind the eight-ball, another avenger- -Bible John himself--is prepared to do whatever it takes to catch the copycat. Rebus\'s eighth case (Let It Bleed, 1996, etc.) is his biggest and most grueling so far. Yet Rankin\'s dexterity in juggling plots and threats and motives lights up the darkness with a poet\'s grace. Reading him is like watching somebody juggle a dozen bottles of single malt without spilling a drop.

#9 Rebus: The Hanging Garden: Ian Rankin\'s ninth book about Inspector John Rebus of the Edinburgh police is so full of story that it seems about to explode into shapeless anarchy at any moment. What keeps it from doing so is Rankin\'s strong heart and even stronger writing skills. When a Bosnian prostitute refuses to testify against a crime boss who has threatened her family, he says this about the cops trying to pressure her: \"Silence in the room. They were all looking at her. Four men, men with jobs, family ties, men with lives of their own. In the scheme of things, they seldom realised how well off they were. And now they realised something else: how helpless they were.\"

Rebus is trying to help the young woman--renamed Candice by the young, slick, brutal thug Tommy Telford, who is into everything from drugs and prostitution to aiding a Japanese business syndicate in acquiring a local golf course--because she\'s about the same age and physical aspect as his own daughter, Sammy. He\'s also conducting the investigation of a suspected Nazi war criminal, an old man who spends his time tending graves in Warriston cemetery. \"A cemetery should have been about death, but Warriston didn\'t feel that way to Rebus. Much of it resembled a rambling park into which some statuary had been dropped,\" Rankin writes with the icy clarity of cold water over stone.

Add to this Rebus\'s involvement with an imprisoned crime boss in a plan to bring Telford down; his continuing battle with drink; the strong possibility that people high up in the British government don\'t want the old Nazi exposed; danger to Sammy and her journalist lover because of her father\'s work; and a somewhat strained metaphor of Edinburgh as a new Babylon and you have an admittedly large pot of stew. But Rankin\'s high art keeps it all bubbling and rich with flavor.

#10 Rebus: Death Is Not the End: Inspector John Rebus of Edinburgh\'s finest has been knocking readers\' socks off for years, in 10 full-length police procedurals by Ian Rankin that star the thoughtful, intelligent Scot. In this neat little novella, he does in 73 pages what many of his peers take three times as long to do--set an interesting scene, solve a crime, develop a character, and allow him to grow and change without sacrificing either pace or plot. Agreeing to track down the missing son of his high school sweetheart and her husband, a friend of his youth, Rebus takes the reader into the gritty back streets and criminal byways of Edinburgh, following Damon Mee from the nightclub where he was last seen through gambling casinos, football matches, and face-to-face encounters with the mobsters who may have been involved in his disappearance. Along the way Rebus confronts his own mortality, the choices he\'s made, and the obligations he owes his past. The theme of vanishing was spun off from Dead Souls, a full- length novel; according to Rankin, he wrote this brief but fully-realized piece first, then cannibalized part of it as a sub-plot for Dead Souls, \"while altering the histories of the characters involved so that both can be read independently.\" Which is why American fans who haven\'t yet read Dead Souls will pick it up right after this one. Death Is Not the End is short enough to read on a shuttle flight and still have time for a nap. But like Rankin\'s other solid Rebus stories, it will stay with you even after you wake up.

#11 Rebus: Dead Souls: Edinburgh\'s Det. Insp. John Rebus is beset by troubles from the past and the present in the loose and rangy 11th installment (after The Hanging Garden) of Rankin\'s popular (and, in England, bestselling) series. At the outset, Rebus, who\'s been drinking too much, endures frequent visitations from his recently deceased comrade-in-arms, Jack Morton, and suffers helplessly as his daughter struggles to recover from a hit-and-run accident that\'s left her paralyzed. Rebus\'s troubles are soon reflected in the old city around him: violent grassroots vigilantism breaks out in a housing project when Rebus informs the press that a convicted child molester is living in one of the flats; Cary Oakes, a serial killer just released from a U.S. prison, returns to Edinburgh; a rising star in the police department dies in an apparent suicide. In addition, as Rebus testifies in a high-profile case of sexual abuse of children, two old school friends ask him to search for their missing son. And as the cop pursues each of these cases, Oakes draws him into a sadistic game of cat-and-mouse. While the many plot lines pull the narrative in disparate directions, the whole is held together by Rankin\'s drum-tight characterization of Rebus as a man deeply shaken in his convictions, but unwilling to fall apart.

#12 Rebus: Set In Darkness: Edinburgh police inspector John Rebus\'s obsession--rock & roll--seems odd for a man whose dark, depressed side is so central to his character, but Ian Rankin always manages to work it gracefully into his noirish novels featuring Rebus. In Set in Darkness, Rebus has a fling with Lorna Grieve, a faded rock muse who\'s the sister of Roddy Grieve, an up-and-coming politico who turns up dead on the grounds of the boarded-up hospital that\'s being torn down to make way for the new Scottish Parliament. Grieve\'s body is the second in the space of days found at Queensberry House; the first was a skeleton bricked up in the fireplace. That decades-old murder seems to be tied to the suicide of a mysterious homeless man whose hefty bank balance is revealed well before his true identity.

#13 Rebus: The Falls: Edinburgh police detective John Rebus, Ian Rankin\'s popular series detective, is a brilliantly realized character, as moody, dark, and melancholy as Edinburgh itself. In The Falls, he\'s almost certain that missing university student Philippa Balfour is dead, but he\'s less sure how she died or what her misadventure has to do with the tiny doll in a hand-sized coffin that turns up near a waterfall on the Balfour family estate. It\'s not the first coffin found near the scene of a crime; could Philippa be the victim of a serial killer? The only other lead the police have is a cryptic e-mail from someone called Quiz Master, inviting Philippa--and then constable Siobhan Clarke, who responds using Philippa\'s screen name--to join him in a bizarre scavenger hunt that might lead Clarke to Philippa\'s body, her killer, or her own death.

This time out Rebus has a new boss, who\'s no happier with his unorthodox style or impolitic attitude toward the Edinburgh establishment than his last one was. But even under department suspension, Rebus manages to tie a number of seemingly disparate and unconnected clues together and deliver a killer in a scene that even the most discerning reader may not see coming until it jumps off the page. A bestseller in the U.K., The Falls is Rankin\'s best yet.

#14 Rebus: Resurrection Men: Like Edinburgh inspector John Rebus, the resurrection men of the title are treading on thin ice--they\'ve all been sent to a short course at the Scottish Police College because they\'ve failed in some way, generally \"an issue with authority.\" Rebus has been known to have issues of that nature before, which only boosts his credibility with the other cops in attendance, suspected by their bosses of being on the wrong side of the fence, on the take, or even guilty of murder on several previous occasions. The dour Inspector\'s agenda aims to bring the higher-ups proof of the so-called Wild Bunch\'s nefarious activities; in the process, his own conduct in the old case he and his college classmates must rework and revisit comes under scrutiny. A solid police procedural whose protagonist, the hero of 14 other titles in this internationally acclaimed series, continues to grow on readers who are just discovering him.

#15 Rebus: A Question of Blood: The 14th novel to feature the always compelling (and, as his name suggests, perpetually puzzling) John Rebus begins with what seems to be a uniquely American crime: a madman enters a school and starts shooting, killing two students and wounding a third before turning the gun on himself. But we\'re in Rankin country-a perpetually damp and morally bankrupt Edinburgh-with Rebus and Siobhan Clarke searching for the real story behind what seems an act of sheer madness. This immensely satisfying police procedural has plenty of forensic science, but Rebus knows that \"none of it might make them any the wiser about the only question that mattered....The why.\" Why did Lee Herdman, a drop-out of the U.K. version of the Special Forces, go on a rampage? Why was James Bell, the son of a self-righteous Scottish M.P., merely wounded? And why are two Army investigators sniffing around the case? A subplot has Rebus himself under suspicion of murder: a minor criminal is found dead, burned in an apartment fire, and Rebus shows up with heavily bandaged hands the next morning. The detectives encounter every stratum of contemporary Scottish society, from angry teenage toughs and petty criminals to the privileged and the powerful. It\'s a complex narrative, perhaps too much so at times, but the plot is less important than Rebus himself, a brilliantly conceived hero who is all too aware of his own shortcomings. In an essentially amoral society, his moral compass is always pointed steadily towards the truth.

#16 Rebus: Fleshmarket Close: An illegal immigrant is found murdered in an Edinburgh housing scheme: a racist attack, or something else entirely? Rebus is drawn into the case, but has other problems: his old police station has closed for business, and his masters would rather he retire than stick around. But Rebus is that most stubborn of creatures. As Rebus investigates, he must visit an asylum seekers\' detention centre, deal with the sleazy Edinburgh underworld, and maybe even fall in love...Siobhan meanwhile has problems of her own. A teenager has disappeared from home and Siobhan is drawn into helping the family, which will mean travelling closer than is healthy towards the web of a convicted rapist. Then there\'s the small matter of the two skeletons - a woman and an infant - found buried beneath a concrete cellar floor in Fleshmarket Close. The scene begins to look like an elaborate stunt - but whose, and for what purpose? And how can it tie to the murder on the unforgiving housing-scheme known as Knoxland?

#17 Rebus: The Naming of the Dead: At the start of Rankin\'s overly complex 18th book to feature Edinburgh\'s Insp. John Rebus (after 2005\'s Fleshmarket Alley), Ben Webster, a Scottish delegate to the Group of Eight summit, dies suspiciously a couple of days before the world\'s leaders gather in Scotland in 2005. While his colleagues are preoccupied by ensuring security at the conference, Rebus is devoting his energy to the murder of Cyril Colliar, a recently released violent sex offender. No one really cares about the case except for Rebus, and that\'s mainly because Colliar was muscle for Edinburgh\'s crime boss \"Big Ger\" Cafferty, with whom Rebus has tangled in earlier novels. Rebus is more than willing to flout authority in his dogged pursuit of Colliar\'s killer, who may be a vigilante intent on punishing rapists. Webster\'s death, never wholly resolved, does connect with Rebus\'s investigation, but the link is tenuous at best. Rankin deftly captures the mad circus鈥攖he media, the security, the demonstrators鈥攐f the G8 summit, but this background muddies the narrative waters. He\'s at his best when he focuses on Rebus and the city of Edinburgh itself.

#18 Rebus: Exit Music: Insp. John Rebus has just 10 days to solve the apparently motiveless murder of Alexander Todorov, an expatriate Russian poet, before he reaches 60 and mandatory retirement in Edgar-winner Rankin\'s rewarding 17th novel to feature the Edinburgh detective (after The Naming of the Dead). When the dogged Rebus and Det. Sgt. Siobhan Clarke look into the crime, they find an array of baffling conspiracies involving Russian businessmen, Scottish bankers and local politicians pushing for an independent Scotland. A second murder, of a man who\'d taped one of Todorov\'s poetry readings, ensures the case gets extra resources, and Rebus\'s own interest is whetted by the possible involvement of Edinburgh crime boss Big Ger Cafferty. Clever, insightful prose more than compensates for the byzantine plot. There\'s an appropriately wistful tone to this final entry in the series. Fans will miss Rebus and wonder what on earth he\'ll do in retirement.

\'STAND-ALONE\' NOVELS.

1. A Cool Head: \"My dad used to say to me, \'Try to keep a cool head and a warm heart\'. At least I think it was my dad. I don\'t really remember him.\" Gravy worked in the graveyard - hence the name. He was having a normal day until his friend Benjy turned up in a car Gravy didn\'t recognise. Benjy had a bullet hole in his chest, but lived just long enough to ask Gravy to hide him and look after his gun. Gravy had looked after things for Benjy before, but never a gun. When Gravy looked in the car he found blood, a balaclava and a bag stuffed with money. Gravy\'s not too bright but he wants to help his friend. So Gravy finds himself caught up in the middle of a robbery gone wrong, a woman who witnessed a murder, and some very unpleasant men who will do anything to get back the money Benjy stole...

2. Doors Open: In Scottish author Rankin\'s intricately plotted heist thriller, software millionaire Mike Mackenzie, high-end banker Allan Cruikshank, and college art professor Robert Gissing devise a plan to liberate forgotten works of art from a warehouse storing the overflow from Edinburgh\'s museum collections. The trio commissions an art student nursing an antiestablishment grudge to paint fakes to swap for the originals, and Mackenzie\'s chance meeting with schoolmate Charlie Chib Calloway, now one of the city\'s most notorious gangsters, allows the group access to muscle and weapons. But cracks soon appear in the plan, with an inquisitive detective inspector, who\'s been on Calloway\'s trail for months, getting too close for comfort. Using the smalltown feel of Edinburgh to advantage, Rankin (_Exit Music_) gives his caper novel a claustrophobic edge while injecting enough twists, turns, and triple crosses that even the most astute reader will be surprised at the outcome.

3. Blood Hunt: It begins with a phone call. Gordon Reeve\'s brother has been found dead in his car in San Diego. The car was locked from the inside, a gun was in his hand. In the US to identify the body Gordon realises that his brother has been murdered. What\'s more, it\'s soon obvious that his own life is in danger.Once back in Scotland he finds out his home has been bugged by professionals. But Reeve is a professional too. Ex-SAS, he was half of a two-man unit with someone he came to fear, then to hate. It looks like his nemesis is back...

4. Bleeding Hearts: A page-turning novel of assassins and double-crossing from the master of modern mystery, Ian Rankin. Michael Weston is a gun for hire. He\'s paid well to do his job and ask no questions. But after successfully assassinating a TV reporter, the cops are quickly on his tail. How did they know how to find him? And who is his anonymous employer? Why did he or she want the reporter dead in the first place? Was he set up to be caught and thrown in jail? The answers may lie with Hoffer, a private detective who has been hunting him for years--ever since Michael dispatched a bullet and accidentally hit an innocent young American girl. Her grieving father has kept Hoffer on retainer and on a mission to bring Weston to justice no matter what the cost. Could Hoffer have finally trapped him? The only way Michael can stay ahead of the police is to find his mysterious employer and figure out who has been playing him like a puppet on strings--or he may find himself on the other end of the rifle.

5. Watchman: Bombs are exploding in the streets of London, but life seems to have planted more subtle booby-traps for Miles Flint. Miles is a spy. His job is to watch and to listen, then to report back to his superiors, nothing more. The job, affording glimpses into the most private lives of his victims, appeals to Miles. He doesn\'t lust after promotion, and he doesn\'t want action. He wants, just for once, not to botch a case. Having lost one suspect - with horrific consequences - Miles becomes too involved with another, a young Irishwoman. His marriage seems ready to crumble to dust. So does his home. But Miles is given one last chance for redemption - a trip to Belfast, which quickly becomes a flight of terror, murder and shocking discoveries. But can the voyeur survive in a world of violent action?

6. The Complaints: Starred Review In the wake of Exit Music (2008), the concluding volume in his celebrated John Rebus series,Rankin has picked a most unlikely new hero. Edinburgh cop Malcolm Fox works for 鈥渢he Complaints,鈥?the despised internal-affairs division whose job it is to investigate other cops. Succeeding the Rebus novels, starring the quintessential maverick copper, with a series built around a cop-hunting cop seems akin to J. K. Rowling following Harry Potter with seven extra-thick novels about a classroom tattletale. And, yet, Rankin pulls it off, making Fox the fall guy in an elaborate police conspiracy and causing him to join forces with a detective under suspicion of peddling child porn. The strange-bedfellows angle drives the interpersonal dynamics here鈥攁nd augurs well for future installments鈥攁s Fox, working off the books, investigates the murder of someone very close to home and attempts to turn the frame-up on its end. Some crime writers keep writing the same series with different characters, but Rankin deserves credit for going another way altogether. Fox is a good and quiet citizen compared to Rebus (he doesn鈥檛 drink and listens to birdsong on the radio, not classic rock), but Rankin doesn鈥檛 hold any of that against his new hero, proving that you can build complex, highly textured, series-worthy characters from the most unlikely of raw materials.

Announce URL:http://inferno.demonoid.me:3404/announce
This Torrent also has several backup trackers
Tracker:http://inferno.demonoid.me:3404/announce
Tracker:udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:80/announce
Tracker:http://tracker.openbittorrent.com/announce
Tracker:udp://tracker.publicbt.com:80/announce
Tracker:http://tracker.publicbt.com:80/announce
Info Hash:a3bbcb6bc7f1a8199dc4df164782603a7deba0e2
Creation Date:Thu, 06 Oct 2011 11:57:52 -0400
This is a Multifile Torrent
Resurrection Men_ An Inspector Rebus Mys - Ian Rankin.mobi 889.04 KBs
Exit Music_ An Inspector Rebus Mystery - Ian Rankin.mobi 687.55 KBs
The Naming of the Dead_ An Inspector Reb - Ian Rankin.mobi 639.17 KBs
The Falls_ An Inspector Rebus Mystery - Ian Rankin.mobi 638.11 KBs
Bleeding Hearts - Ian Rankin.mobi 606.18 KBs
Black and Blue_ An Inspector Rebus Myste - Ian Rankin.mobi 598.76 KBs
Fleshmarket Close_ An Inspector Rebus My - Ian Rankin.mobi 587.59 KBs
The Complaints - Ian Rankin.mobi 582.44 KBs
Let It Bleed_ An Inspector Rebus Mystery - Ian Rankin.mobi 555.65 KBs
Dead Souls_ An Inspector Rebus Mystery - Ian Rankin.mobi 549.13 KBs
Set in Darkness__ An Inspector Rebus Mys - Ian Rankin.mobi 533.16 KBs
The Hanging Garden_ An Inspector Rebus M - Ian Rankin.mobi 531.73 KBs
A Question of Blood_ _ An Inspector Rebu - Ian Rankin.mobi 513.55 KBs
Mortal Causes_ An Inspector Rebus Myster - Ian Rankin.mobi 493.69 KBs
Blood Hunt - Ian Rankin.mobi 473.34 KBs
Tooth and Nail_ An Inspector Rebus Myste - Ian Rankin.mobi 442.4 KBs
Doors Open - Ian Rankin.mobi 423.62 KBs
Watchman - Ian Rankin.mobi 418.88 KBs
Hide and Seek_ An Inspector Rebus Myster - Ian Rankin.mobi 412.31 KBs
Strip Jack_ An Inspector Rebus Mystery - Ian Rankin.mobi 408.72 KBs
The Black Book_ An Inspector Rebus Myste - Ian Rankin.mobi 402.86 KBs
Knots and Crosses_ An Inspector Rebus My - Ian Rankin.mobi 289.63 KBs
A Cool Head - Ian Rankin.mobi 141.38 KBs
Death Is Not the End_ _ An Inspector Reb - Ian Rankin.mobi 118.95 KBs
Torrent downloaded from Demonoid.me.txt 46 Bytes
Combined File Size:11.66 MBs
Piece Size:64 KBs
Comment:Updated by fictionbooksbay.com
Torrent Encoding:UTF-8
Seeds:21
Peers:9
Completed Downloads:201
Torrent Download:Torrent Free Downloads
Tips:Sometimes the torrent health info isn't accurate, so you can download the file and check it out or try the following downloads.
Direct Download:Download Files Now
Tips:You could try out the alternative bittorrent clients.
Secured Download:Start Anonymous Download
Ads: 14 days trial

Search For E books

Ads

Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter.
Share |

Sponsor Links