Barbara Vine (Ruth Rendell) Books in Order
Part ofRuth Rendell Books in OrderBrowse the Barbara Vine novels by Ruth Rendell in order, with short summaries, a note on the pen name, series context, and where-to-start tips.
Last updated: January 13, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
15 books
The Child's Child
by Barbara Vine
2012
Grace Easton, a university lecturer studying unmarried mothers in Victorian fiction, shares an inherited Hampstead house with her brother Andrew. When Andrew's boyfriend moves in and Grace reads a manuscript about a 1930s scandal, old prejudices around illegitimacy and homosexuality begin to play out with dangerous force in their own lives.
Birthday Present
by Barbara Vine
2008
Rising Tory MP Ivor Tesham arranges a mock kidnapping as an extravagant birthday surprise for his married lover Hebe, but the game ends in a fatal crash. Years later, anonymous letters, guilty witnesses and shifting political fortunes threaten to expose his part in the disaster.
Minotaur
by Barbara Vine
2005
Young nurse Kerstin Kvist moves into Lydstep Old Hall, a decaying Essex mansion, to care for John Cosway, an adult son kept heavily sedated by his domineering family. As she questions his treatment, she is pulled into the Cosways' jealous quarrels, locked rooms and a dangerous family secret.
The Blood Doctor
by Barbara Vine
2002
Martin Nanther, a modern Lord and biographer, sets out to write about his great grandfather, a Victorian expert on blood diseases and royal physician. Tracing the family's history of haemophilia, he uncovers a pattern of deaths that suggests his ancestor's brilliance hid something monstrous.
Grasshopper
by Barbara Vine
2000
After a tragic fall from an electricity pylon, nineteen year old Clodagh Brown is sent to London to start again. Joining a group who roam the city's rooftops at night, she finds love, freedom and the unnerving sense that another disaster is waiting high above the streets.
The Chimney Sweeper's Boy
by Barbara Vine
1998
When acclaimed novelist Gerald Candless dies suddenly, his adoring daughter Sarah agrees to write his biography. Researching the man she thought she knew, she discovers that his name, childhood and family history were all inventions, and that his reinvention hides a forgotten crime.
The Brimstone Wedding
by Barbara Vine
1995
Care home aide Jenny Warden hides an affair and a miserable marriage behind a calm face. Her bond with Stella, a dying resident with a vanished lover and a secret house, draws Jenny into a decades old story of passion, control and a possible murder that echoes her own life.
In the Time of His Prosperity
by Barbara Vine
1995
Beautiful young art historian Paul Hazlitt accepts a lucrative job cataloguing a millionaire's collection of Mesoamerican art. His increasingly uneasy letters from the estate hint at strange rituals, and when he disappears, the people left behind must decide what they are willing to believe.
No Night Is Too Long
by Barbara Vine
1994
Tim Cornish, a clever but unreliable young man, writes a private confession about the older lover who supported him and the woman he met on an Alaskan cruise. His story of passion, betrayal and a struggle on a remote island circles a question he cannot bear to answer.
Asta's Book / Anna's Book
by Barbara Vine
1993
When the sharp, funny diaries of Danish immigrant Asta Long are rediscovered, her descendants become fascinated by the voice on the page. As they translate and investigate, the notebooks' casual entries lead toward an old child's murder and unsettling truths about identity and belonging.
King Solomon's Carpet
by Barbara Vine
1991
Jarvis Stringer studies the London Underground and lets rooms in a derelict schoolhouse by the tracks. The misfits who gather there, from runaway musicians to thrill seeking teenagers and a vigilant hawk keeper, are gradually pulled together by the tube network into a chain of accidents and deliberate harm.
Gallowglass
by Barbara Vine
1990
Suicidal and adrift, Joe is hauled from the path of a train by charismatic Sandor, who demands lifelong loyalty in return. Drawn into Sandor's plan to kidnap glamorous Nina, Joe finds himself trapped in a web of obsession, dependence and escalating violence.
The House of Stairs
by Barbara Vine
1988
Novelist Lizzie Vetch spots her old friend Bell from a taxi and impulsively follows her, despite the terrible history between them. Remembering their bohemian years in her aunt's London townhouse, she slowly unravels the jealousies and betrayals that ended in prison and tragedy.
A Fatal Inversion
by Barbara Vine
1987
When human bones are found in the pet cemetery of Wyvis Hall, Adam and his former friends know the discovery points back to their hedonistic summer there in 1976. Forced to confront buried guilt, they relive a season of love, lies and a fatal choice.
A Dark-Adapted Eye
by Barbara Vine
1986
Years after her aunt Vera is hanged for murder, Faith Severn agrees to revisit the scandal that scarred her family. As she pieces together wartime memories, she uncovers a dangerous rivalry between two sisters and the child who stood between them.
Series background & context
The Barbara Vine books are Ruth Rendell's other lane, written under a pen name she used for psychological mysteries and family stories that unfold over years. The sequence starts with A Dark-Adapted Eye and continues through later novels like The Birthday Present and The Child's Child. The name was drawn from her own middle name and a family surname, and it helped signal that these novels would be less about procedure and more about memory.
Instead of a detective arriving to take statements, a Vine novel often begins with someone looking back: a daughter trying to understand a parent, an adult revisiting a summer, a researcher following a paper trail. The past is never just background, it is the engine of the plot. A death, a disappearance, or a ruined relationship sits at the center, and the suspense comes from how long it can take to name what everyone already suspects.
They read like memories turning into evidence.
Across the series you see Rendell returning to the same pressures: class, inheritance, hidden relationships, the rules around respectability, and the ways people protect themselves with silence. She is especially good on the slow corrosion of guilt, and on the damage done when families decide it is easier to rewrite history than to face it. The narrators can be unreliable, not always because they lie, but because they are afraid of what the truth will say about them.
Vine stories are also full of objects and places that hold on to secrets. Houses, photographs, letters, diaries, even city maps can become clues. The books move between decades, letting you watch how one decision in youth shapes a whole chain of later choices, including the ones people pretend they never made.
You do not have to read the Vine novels in order, but publication order is the simplest route because it lets you feel the style deepen over time. Many readers begin with A Dark-Adapted Eye or A Fatal Inversion, then continue with The House of Stairs or The Chimney Sweeper's Boy for that mix of intimacy and dread. If you enjoy the later, darker entries, titles like The Blood Doctor and Minotaur are good next steps.
If you come to Vine expecting the pace of the Wexford investigations, these may feel quieter at first. Stick with them. The tension is in what is not said, and in the moment a narrator realizes they have been living with the wrong story. Several of these novels have also been adapted for the screen, which makes sense, they are built around atmosphere and revelation.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.





























Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts