Inspector Rutledge: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(update links)
(tropelist)
 
Line 2: Line 2:
Charles Todd's Inspector Ian Rutledge has appeared in thirteen mysteries since 1996, with the fourteenth scheduled for 2012. A [[World War I]] veteran, Rutledge has severe [[Shell-Shocked Veteran|shell shock]]: he unceasingly hallucinates the voice of Hamish MacLeod, a young Scottish officer he was forced to execute for dereliction of duty. Hamish provides a running commentary on Rutledge's cases, which is sometimes helpful, sometimes not. In times of stress, however, Hamish becomes extremely vindictive, and makes it impossible for Rutledge to hear or understand anything else.
Charles Todd's Inspector Ian Rutledge has appeared in thirteen mysteries since 1996, with the fourteenth scheduled for 2012. A [[World War I]] veteran, Rutledge has severe [[Shell-Shocked Veteran|shell shock]]: he unceasingly hallucinates the voice of Hamish MacLeod, a young Scottish officer he was forced to execute for dereliction of duty. Hamish provides a running commentary on Rutledge's cases, which is sometimes helpful, sometimes not. In times of stress, however, Hamish becomes extremely vindictive, and makes it impossible for Rutledge to hear or understand anything else.


{{tropelist}}

-----
=== Provides examples of the following tropes: ===

* [[Always Murder]]
* [[Always Murder]]
* [[Claustrophobia]]: Part of Rutledge's shellshock. After a bombing, he was [[Buried Alive]] under a mound of dirt, protected only by Hamish's corpse.
* [[Claustrophobia]]: Part of Rutledge's shellshock. After a bombing, he was [[Buried Alive]] under a mound of dirt, protected only by Hamish's corpse.

Latest revision as of 19:20, 20 December 2019

Charles Todd's Inspector Ian Rutledge has appeared in thirteen mysteries since 1996, with the fourteenth scheduled for 2012. A World War I veteran, Rutledge has severe shell shock: he unceasingly hallucinates the voice of Hamish MacLeod, a young Scottish officer he was forced to execute for dereliction of duty. Hamish provides a running commentary on Rutledge's cases, which is sometimes helpful, sometimes not. In times of stress, however, Hamish becomes extremely vindictive, and makes it impossible for Rutledge to hear or understand anything else.

Tropes used in Inspector Rutledge include: