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Inspector Wexford #9

Shake Hands Forever

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An accountant takes his mother to his home for the weekend with the view of improving relations between her and his second wife, but on their arrival, his wife is found strangled.

Audio Cassette

First published January 1, 1975

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About the author

Ruth Rendell

456 books1,625 followers
A.K.A. Barbara Vine

Ruth Barbara Rendell, Baroness Rendell of Babergh, CBE, who also wrote under the pseudonym Barbara Vine, was an acclaimed English crime writer, known for her many psychological thrillers and murder mysteries and above all for Inspector Wexford.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 226 reviews
Profile Image for Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder.
2,705 reviews250 followers
March 12, 2023
Wexford’s White Whale
Review of the Arrow Books/Cornerstone Digital Kindle eBook edition (2010) of the original Hutchinson hardcover (1975)

‘Howard, you are my only ally.’ ‘Well, you know what Chesterton said about that.’ Wexford put on his dressing gown and went downstairs to find what Chesterton had said. ‘There are no words to express the abyss between isolation and having one ally. It may be conceded to the mathematicians that four is twice two. But two is not twice one; two is two thousand times one.’ - Inspector Wexford is bucked up by the support of his nephew Howard Fortune.


I was so swept up in my current binge read / re-read of Ruth Rendell (aka Barbara Vine) that I picked up an eBook edition of Wexford #9, having forgotten that I had already re-read & reviewed it back in 2022 as Wexford's Chimera when I discovered an old hoard of paperbacks. That review and rating stands after this additional re-read.

I will add that there is an extra level of enjoyment in a Rendell eBook binge as it allows for an easy markup of Notes and Highlights, allowing you to research Rendell's various literary quotes and allusions.


Cover image for the Arrow Books paperback reprint edition from 1985. Image sourced from Goodreads.

Trivia and Links
Shake Hands For Ever was adapted for television as part of the Ruth Rendell / Inspector Wexford Mysteries TV series (1987-2000) as Season 2 Episodes 4 to 6 in 1988 with actor George Baker as Inspector Wexford. You can watch the entire 3 episodes on YouTube here.
Profile Image for Barbara K.
706 reviews198 followers
January 4, 2021
Definitely one of my favorites so far in our buddy read of all the Wexfords in sequence. Clever plotting, quick and evocative character descriptions, a narrative that keeps moving along, and a tense ending. Although early on I suspected what did turn out to be the ultimate solution, Rendell threw in enough plausible red herrings that I dismissed the idea. Ha!

These books are great entertainment in compact form. They aren't noir, they aren't cozies, they are police procedurals written in the time before cell phones existed and before forensics took over (at least at this point in the series). It's all about the deductive powers and persistence of the detectives, Wexford in particular.

I always feel like letting out a very satisfied sigh when I've finished one of these. Time well spent.
Profile Image for Bruce Beckham.
Author 85 books460 followers
October 1, 2018
This is an Inspector Wexford novel – and it reminds me that I much prefer Ruth Rendell’s suspense stories to her mysteries.

For the most part the plot is satisfactory – it certainly kept me reading – but when it came to the denouement I felt the motive was unconvincing and the practical details of the crime implausibly intricate.

In short a woman is found strangled on her bed by her returning husband and mother-in-law. From very early on the husband is identified as the only likely suspect – and indeed the plot becomes more of a ‘howdunit’ than a whodunit. If Wexford can answer ‘how’ – he will nail the murderer.

But Wexford is taken off the case and has to resort to subterfuge – and simultaneously he is rather bizarrely distracted by a peripheral temptress who seems to have designs upon his new trim figure!

The prose is rather clunky and the narrative a bit disjointed at times, and I frequently felt the interactions between characters were unnatural. I understand this was the 9th Wexford mystery (1975), so I’m a little baffled that I gained impressions that were slightly more towards the negative.
Profile Image for Alan (on December semi-hiatus) Teder.
2,705 reviews250 followers
September 4, 2022
Wexford's Chimera
Review of the Arrow Books paperback edition (1976/1985 reprint) of the original Hutchinson hardcover (1975)

Ruth Rendell continues to impress me with another of my 1980's re-reads. Shake Hands for Ever (most later editions show the title as Shake Hands Forever), is listed as No. 9 in her Inspector Wexford series (1964-2013).

Angela Hathall has been strangled in her cottage in West Sussex. She was discovered by her mother-in-law and husband as they came for a weekend visit. The husband Robert Hathall was commuting weekly to London for work. The trip had been meant as a reconciliation of Hathall's mother with Angela, his 2nd wife, with whom there had been an earlier quarrel. Wexford has a theory about the crime, but no one else believes him, especially his Chief Constable Charles Griswold. After complaints by the husband, he is taken off the case.

Despite having to work the case unofficially, Wexford persists in having Hathall occasionally followed in London by paying off an old contact and by calling in favours from his nephew Howard Fortune, a Chief Superintendent of CID in London. Over the course of 15 months, Wexford continues to hope that the case will catch a break and that Hathall and a co-conspirator will be discovered. He is continually disappointed until a chance coincidence ties Hathall into an apparently unrelated payroll fraud. It all leads to a final dramatic conclusion with a shocking twist reveal by Wexford.


Cover of the original Hutchinson hardcover (1975). Image sourced from Wikipedia.

Rendell also plays a sly game with readers by introducing a suspiciously attractive neighbour widow Nancy Lake, who was a partial witness to events at the murder cottage. Lake seems especially drawn to Wexford and flirtatiously arranges to keep meeting him throughout the course of the investigation. Is she somehow involved in the crime or is the Inspector that much of a romantic interest to her? Rendell teasingly leaves their final meeting to your imagination: Did Wexford or didn't he cheat on his faithful wife Dora? Your opinion of Wexford's character, based on the previous 8 novels, will determine your answer to that question.

I re-read Shake Hands for Ever due to the discovery of a hoard of my old 1980's mystery paperbacks while cleaning out a storage locker. I only have a few of the old Ruth Rendell paperbacks, so this isn't the start of one of my complete binge re-reads. Rendell is definitely one of the masters of the Silver Age of Crime though, so I will certainly be re-reading several of her books.

Trivia and Links
Shake Hands Forever was adapted for television as part of the long running series of The Ruth Rendell Mysteries (1987-2000), sometimes called 'The Inspector Wexford Mysteries'. It ran as Episodes 4 to 6 of Series 2 in 1988. The entire 3 Episodes can be viewed on YouTube here. The TV series stars actor George Baker as Inspector Wexford.
Profile Image for Susan.
1,060 reviews198 followers
January 3, 2021
I am rating this a five for the glimpse into Wexford's life. The mystery in itself wasn't much but Wexford's obsession with it and with one of the witnesses made it one of the more interesting books in the series yet. It gave me a whole new viewpoint of him and his character which, of course, made it so interesting. I would not want to get on his bad side because he just doesn't stop.

Would he have persisted if the survivors had been a little nicer? Offered him a cup of tea? How about if one of the witnesses had been less appealing? What about if his nephew hadn't helped out? These are all interesting questions. It's good to be surprised about a character in a long running season.

Please join us for a discussion on our buddy read in the English Mystery Book Club.
Profile Image for Helen Ahern.
268 reviews26 followers
February 12, 2025
I really like Ruth Rendell’s Inspector Wexford but although this started very well as I went through I lost interest in where it was going. I wanted to find out what happened but I really didn’t care. For me a good book has to have someone that you care in some way for. Even Wexford lost my sympathies along the way. Not what I expected.
Profile Image for John.
1,680 reviews131 followers
March 9, 2019
My favorite Wexford mystery so far because of the ending which I should have worked out by the clues. Wexford is investigating the murder of a wife strangled with the husband having an ironclad alibi. However, he suspects him and becomes obsessed with the case even when he is taken off it. The case also throws in a side story with the attractive Nancy Lake and whether Wexford does or not does. A great read with just the right amount of red herrings and puzzlingly clues.

The ending I really enjoyed.
Profile Image for Jaksen.
1,611 reviews91 followers
August 29, 2015
I am reading Rendell (and Barbara Vine) not because she recently passed away, but because I'd read so many of her books years ago, and rather in a haphazard way. I'd read one, liked it; read another, not liked it. But I remembered 'A Dark-Adapted Eye' as one of my favorites. I was re-reading it when I learned of her passing.

I also remembered how much I did like so many of her books, so now I am reading the Wexford novels, though I couldn't find the first or, or any of numbers 1-8, at my local library. They did have 'Shake Hands Forever,' which I'd never read, so I figured...

Well, it's a short book, but a great read. Crisp writing. Great MC - I do like Mr. Wexford a lot. He's a plain-spoken, (sometimes outspoken) police inspector who has a way of ingratiating himself to some, and not so much to others. The kind of person I think I'd like in real life, who some of my friends would openly dislike and others think he's as charming as I do. No in-betweens. Anyhow, in this novel Wexford is trying to solve the murder of a young wife who is surrounded by horribly horrible people. There is a mother-in-law who I swear Rendell modeled after one of my own female relatives (or one of my mother's disapproving friends), and a husband who's also a huge jerk. Just. A. Jerk. As Wexford goes through his investigation he's handicapped by his own, sometimes-abrasive, and always outspoken way of questioning people. So the case is more or less taken away from him and given to less senior police investigators.

Handicapped by this, and determined to solve the young woman's murder, he has to conduct his own inquiries in a roundabout sort of way, using old friends and family contacts to help him learn just how and why the young wife died.

There are diversions along the way. (Rendell is nothing if not a capable mystery writer.) And lots of introspection. It's a deeply psychological murder mystery, as so many of her books are.

Anyhow, a quick read. I totally enjoyed it. Read it during lunch, brief periods of waiting for family members who were going here or there or needed me for something. Also while the grandson took a nap in a nice quiet house. Enjoyable.

I have requested some of Rendell's earlier books, including the first four of the Wexford novels, through my library's shared management system. I can't wait to read them.

Profile Image for Bettie.
9,977 reviews5 followers
September 12, 2016


Read by................ Nigel Anthony
Total Runtime......... 6 Hours 43 Mins

Description: The bed was neatly made, and the woman on top neatly strangled.

According to all accounts, Angela Hathall was deeply in love with her husband and far too paranoid to invite an unknown person into their home. So who managed to gain entry and strangle her without a struggle? That is the problem facing Inspector Wexford in Shake Hands Forever. Perhaps it was the mystery woman who left her fingerprints on the Hathall's bathtub? Perhaps it was Angela's husband who lied about a stolen library book? And why was the Hathall home, usually so unkempt, exqisitely clean the day of Angela's death? Then a neighbor--friendly, knowing, disarmingly beautiful--offers Wexford her assistance. And what begins as a rather tricky case turns into an obsession that threatens to destroy the Inspector's career--as well as his marriage.


Did Charles Lamb say, as per this story, that he would rather see a theatre queue than all the sheep on Epsom Downs? No sheep there when and since I was born!
'Virtue is its own reward'

'Sic transit gloria mundi'

3* From Doon With Death (Inspector Wexford, #1)
3* A New Lease of Death (Inspector Wexford, #2)
3* Wolf to the Slaughter (Inspector Wexford, #3)
2* The Best Man to Die (Inspector Wexford, #4)
3* A Guilty Thing Suprised #5
3* No More Dying Then (Inspector Wexford, #6)
3* Murder Being Once Done (Inspector Wexford, #7)
3* Some Lie and Some Die (Inspector Wexford, #8)
3* Shake Hands Forever (Inspector Wexford, #9)

3* Not in the Flesh (Inspector Wexford, #21)
2* The Vault (Inspector Wexford, #23)

Profile Image for Katie.
79 reviews30 followers
March 3, 2012
I thought I had it all figured out. I was wrong, again. Per usual, red herrings abound in this Inspector Wexford centered mystery.

A woman is found dead in her home; she's been strangled by what appears to be a gilded necklace. The only evidence? Three coarse hairs and a fingerprint showing a small half-moon scar.

It's 1975, so there aren't any computer data bases, and other modern detective devices, which makes Inspector Wexford's job all the more difficult, and interesting.

Ruth Rendell is a powerhouse when it comes to characterization. Her economy of language is admirable. She is able to conjure up fantastic visuals, not only in character appearance, but also in their behaviors, with only a few words.

I used to read the series out of order, and I'm glad I've turned around to reading Rendell's earliest work. Inspector Wexford shows major character development book by book, and his connections within the London scene, as well as his home life, make for a much more satisfying and sensical read.

I did find fault with the endless descriptions of who crossed what street, rode the tube to what station, and took the bus to what stop, but those bits are easily skimmed, and as long as you get the general idea, they aren't important to the story as a whole, although I understand why she included them.

It ends neatly with a clever twist, loose ends are tied up in surprising ways, and I was left satisfied. Hooray! 3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Lobstergirl.
1,921 reviews1,436 followers
May 30, 2022

This is my fourth Rendell but my first in the Wexford series. It was very well written. The first chapter is a brilliantly sour portrait of a passive-aggressive mother who feels schadenfreude with each of her adult son's small failures. There's a twist at the end I didn't anticipate. I dig this 1975 cover.
Profile Image for Corey.
Author 85 books279 followers
February 21, 2021
A great who-done-it. She was the best.
Profile Image for Trish.
439 reviews24 followers
June 15, 2012
All I really did yesterday was bake in the sun (in SPF 50, of course) and read this book. I picked up an absolutely pristine copy at the library book sale and decided to make my first foray into Rendell's Inspector Wexford series. Not my favorite Rendell, but certainly a solid showing.

When Angela Hathall is found strangled to death in her country home, Wexford's attention is drawn to the husband. Although by all accounts devoted to his wife, Robert doesn't seem to behave just as a bereaved spouse should. His grief is a bit too studied, he's a bit too impatient for news of fingerprints, and why did he send his mother upstairs where the body was found instead of looking for his absent wife there himself?

Before Wexford can ferret out any solid evidence, his superior orders him to leave Robert Hathall alone--the man has complained that he is being "persecuted" and Wexford's boss believes it's in the best interests of Sussex to leave Hathall alone.

But Wexford continues to investigate on the sly, enlisting the aid of his nephew and of a petty crook looking to pick up funds to exchange for a foul mix of Guinness and Pernod. Wexford is convinced that Hathall did away with his wife with the help of a female accomplice, a new lover. If he can catch Hathall with the woman, he'll know he's on the right track.

I had suspected for a while that the dead woman was not Angela Hathall, and I turned out to be right (very satisfying to feel smart, even though it was more likely just because I've become suspicious of any plot that seems too straightfoward). It was too strange that Angela would be wearing the very same outfit she had worn the first and only prior time she had met her mother-in-law, particularly since the mother-in-law detested those clothes. Hathall's devotion to Angela seemed genuine--the two twisted souls had found one another and now would stick at nothing to stay together.

Wexford finally manages to connect the murder of "Angela" with the disappearance of a woman who once worked at the same company as Hathall. She must have tumbled to his payroll fraud, and as an honest woman she posed a great risk to Robert and Angela. They contrived to get rid of her while laying the groundwork for secretly skipping the country. They are only barely caught before they can depart for Brazil.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Leslie.
444 reviews19 followers
September 7, 2015
What a fiendishly clever story! I was afraid I'd figured out the mystery halfway through, and didn't want that to be the solution: first, because I liked the character who'd've been "guilty"; second, because I didn't want it to be that easy.

I needn't have feared such a thing, although I did have a glimmer of an idea early on but dismissed it. And I'd thought what I considered the solution because that's what Ruth Rendell wanted me to think.

Rare is the book that finds me slowing down as I reach the end so as not to miss a thing. But most of Rendell's books are this way for me; reading her is more than tracking a mystery...it's often like listening to a friend who's, for example, telling you about a neighborhood that used to be quite something but has sadly fallen on hard times. The tone is matter of fact, but chummy.

And as always, her descriptions are nearly beyond compare...particularly when it comes to unpleasant characters. Oh, she's cutting. So dry. A woman of few words...but you get it. I love Rendell's Inspector Wexford novels, and look forward to sitting down with the next.
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,419 reviews49 followers
June 20, 2013
As my husband and I listened to this book in the car, we stopped the CD a couple times to wonder why Wexford was being blocked by his supervisor from from investigating people who seemed to us to be the most likely murderers. Needless to say there are twists and surprises that make it worth 4 stars so the delay was needed as a plot device. Surely some more plausible plot device could have been devised.

A caution for those who plan to listen to the audio version read by Nigel Anthony. He voices one of the women characters at such a low volume that it is impossible to understand the words in an economy car such as ours. Maybe it is not a problem in quiet luxury car. We had to constantly change the volume whenever Wexford had a conversation with Nancy, often missing the first part of her replies to his questions.


Profile Image for Rita.
1,688 reviews
October 6, 2011
1975. Well-written, though not memorably so.

Some nice bits of psychology, though the characters do not come alive for me.

goodreads reviews all focused on the plot, nobody mentioned anything 'literary'... that tells us something.
A nice way to pass the time.

A better book of hers is Anna's Book, written under a pseudonym [Barbara Vine]
Profile Image for Deb W.
1,844 reviews1 follower
September 12, 2016
Ruth writes a steady mystery and her characters have their endearing qualities, but this particular work lingered on the edge of "why am I still reading this?" and only marginally satisfied me once completed. I will keep reading her, but I hope this isn't an indication of the quality of work that follows.
Profile Image for Deb Jones.
805 reviews106 followers
September 16, 2021
Inspector Wexford finds himself alone in suspecting the widowed husband of a strangled young woman. Wexford's superior tells Wexford in no uncertain terms to stay away from the widower because there is no evidence, only Wexford's "feeling" about the man's guilt.

His hands tied, at least, officially, Wexford resorts to investigating the woman's death by unofficial means and finds himself a surprising ally in his efforts along the way.

In the meantime, the newly trim Wexford finds himself the object of an attractive woman's interest and finds himself returning that interest. The question is, will Wexford act on this mutual attraction? Rendell's handling of this situation is nothing short of genius.

Another compelling story and great reading journey.
Profile Image for Dave.
1,287 reviews28 followers
August 20, 2020
Solid Wexford, with big surprises pushed a bit too far towards the end.
Profile Image for Libby.
90 reviews6 followers
December 21, 2021
A shining example of Wexford’s dogged determination to get his man. And what a plot twist! Couldn’t put it down!
Profile Image for David Highton.
3,742 reviews32 followers
December 30, 2022
Another good story about a unsolved murder, with only Wexford doggedness continuing to try and establish his strong suspicions
Profile Image for Bianca.
27 reviews
May 10, 2025
A lot better than A Murder being Once Done. This time I knew what I was reading and a lot more curious as to who and how.
Profile Image for Bev.
3,268 reviews346 followers
January 14, 2014
Despite the fact that neither Robert Hathall nor his wife Angela seemed particularly likeable...and that each appeared to outsiders to be as paranoid and "nervy" as all get out, no one seemed to dispute the fact that they were very much in love with each other. There's not much money rolling about--Robert has been married before and his extra cash is destined for alimony and child support. So...no jealousy motive, no money motive, and a poor showing of a burglary motive...why was Angela Hathall strangled to death in her own home and found dead in the bedroom by her mother-in-law? From the beginning Inspector Reginald Wexford suspects the husband. But Robert has an iron-clad alibi that puts him in London at the time Angela was being murdered in Kingsmarkham.

There's not a shred of proof to point to the husband (or anyone else for that matter) and Wexford's Chief Constable tells him to back off of Robert after the man complains that Wexford is persecuting him. With no official backing...and even his subordinate Mike Burden wondering if the chief inspector doesn't just have a bee in his bonnet about the husband, Wexford uses up some of his leave time, employs an out of work acquaintance to "tail" Hathall, and even convinces his nephew, a police superintendent in London, to lend him a hand. Has Wexford gotten obsessed with a single idea? Is he over-reacting as his Chief Constable believes? Or are they up against a murder more ingenious than anyone else can believe?

Shake Hands Forever employs a rather nice twist that readers with less crime fiction experience will definitely find surprising. Even those of us who have been reading mysteries for thirty-some years can appreciate the way Ruth Rendell turns things upside down and forces you to look at the evidence from an entirely different point of view. Not an incredible amount of action--the solution is more slow and steady wins the race than the hurly burly of a dramatic chase and slam-bang finish. Lots of red herrings and it's fun to watch Inspector Wexford vamped by a beautiful witness. Highly enjoyable read at 3.5 stars.

First posted on my blog My Reader's Block. Please request permission before reposting. Thanks.
Profile Image for Tess.
136 reviews13 followers
December 17, 2008
In this mystery Rendell quotes Chesterton and I love the quote:

"There are no words to express the abyss between isolation and having one ally. It may be conceded to the mathematician that four is twice two, but two is not twice one..."
Profile Image for Stacey.
583 reviews
February 18, 2012
I liked this one. Not nearly as dated as the rock concert one, and I liked the continuing relationship between Wexford and his nephew, the business with Wexford losing weight, and his maybe/maybe not liaison with Mrs. Lake. Nice twist ending.
50 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2015
Great Rendell Mystery

A challenging case for detective Wexford. He's challenged and left alone to his devices to make sense of this murder of a wife. I've always liked Wexford's vulnerabilities, here they are as a man as well as a detective. Enjoy a great mystery.
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