Ian Rankin Bio, Age, Wife, Children, Documentaries, Net Worth, Books

Ian Rankin Biography

Ian Rankin is a Scottish criminal novelist and philanthropist best known for his Inspector Rebus series. Following his move to his Quartermile flat, Rankin bequeathed his personal archives to the National Library of Scotland in 2019.

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How old is Ian Rankin? – Age

He is 63 years old as of 28 April 2023. He was born in 1960 in Cardenden, United Kingdom. His real name is Ian James Rankin.

Ian Rankin Family – Education

His father, James, owns a grocery store, and his mother, Isobel, works in a school canteen. He received his education at Beath High School in Cowdenbeath. His parents were appalled when he decided to study literature at university, as they had intended him to learn a trade. Encouraged by his English teacher, he persevered and graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1982. He also worked on a dissertation on Muriel Spark but did not complete it. He has lectured at the institution and remains involved with the James Tait Black Memorial Prize.

Ian Rankin Wife – Children

He resides in Edinburgh with his wife, Miranda (née Harvey), whom he met at university and married in 1986, and their two kids, John Morgan “Jack” Harvey-Rankin (1992) and Christopher Connor “Kit” Harvey-Rankin (1994). He has recognized the support they receive from Forward Vision in Edinburgh in caring for Kit and other young adults with special needs.

They spent several years in the Merchiston/Morningside area, close authors J. K. Rowling, Alexander McCall Smith, and Kate Atkinson, before relocating to a penthouse property in the former Edinburgh Royal Infirmary building in Quartermile, Lauriston. The pair also owns a property in Cromarty, Scottish Highlands. Rankin appears as a character in McCall Smith’s 2004 novel 44 Scotland Street.

Ian Rankin Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth of $10 million.

Ian Rankin Documentaries

Rankin is a regular contributor to BBC Two’s arts programme Newsnight Review. His three-part documentary series about evil aired on Channel 4 in December 2002. In 2005, he produced Rankin on the Staircase, a 30-minute documentary on BBC Four that looked into the relationship between real-life crimes and crime fiction. It was partially inspired on the Michael Peterson murder case, which was featured in Jean-Xavier Lestrade’s documentary series Death on the Staircase. The same year, Rankin worked with folk artist Jackie Leven on the album Jackie Leven Said.

Ian Rankin Photo
Ian Rankin Photo

In 2007, Rankin starred in BBC Four programs that investigated the origins of his alter-ego character, John Rebus. In these, labeled “Ian Rankin’s Hidden Edinburgh” and “Ian Rankin Investigates Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde,” Rankin delves into the character’s roots and the events leading up to his conception. In the television show Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, he travels through Edinburgh with writer and cook Anthony Bourdain.

Ian Rankin Books

He thought his most memorable books, Bunches and Crosses and Find the stowaway, were standard books, more with regards to the Scottish customs of Robert Louis Stevenson and even Muriel Flash. He was ruffled by their characterization as classification fiction. The Scottish author Allan Massie, who mentored Rankin while Massie was essayist in-home at the College of Edinburgh, consoled him by saying, “Do you suppose John Buchan at any point stressed over regardless of whether he was composing writing?”

Rankin’s Examiner Rebus books are set mostly in Edinburgh. They are viewed as significant commitments to the plaid noir genre. Thirteen of the books — in addition to one brief tale — were adjusted as a TV series on ITV, featuring John Hannah as Rebus in series 1 and 2 (4 episodes) and Ken Stott in that job in series 3-5 (10 episodes).

Ian Rankin Career

Rankin didn’t embark to be a wrongdoing essayist.  In 2009, Rankin gave the brief tale “Hands on work” to Oxfam’s Bull Stories project, four assortments of UK stories composed by 38 creators. Rankin’s story was distributed in the Earth assortment. In 2009 Rankin expressed on Radio Five Experience that he would begin work on a five-or six-issue run on the comic book Hellblazer, despite the fact that he might transform the story into an independent realistic novel all things considered. The Dizziness Comics board at WonderCon 2009 affirmed that the story would be distributed as a realistic novel, Dim Passages, the second delivery from the organization’s Dizziness Wrongdoing engrave.

In 2013, Rankin co-composed the play Dim Street with Imprint Thomson, the creative overseer of the Imperial Lyceum Theater. The play, which denoted Rankin’s play-composing debut, debuted at the Lyceum Theater, Edinburgh, in September 2013. In 2005, Rankin turned into the 10th top rated author in England, representing 10% of all wrongdoing fiction sold. He composes under the nom de plume Harvey too.

In 2021, Rankin helped finish a draft by William McIlvanney, a prequel recounting the tale of an early instance of McIlvanney’s made up investigator Jack Laidlaw. McIlvanney, whom Rankin appreciates, had kicked the bucket in 2015 leaving the composition incomplete. It was distributed under the name The Dim Remaining parts.

In 2022, Rankin marked an arrangement with distributer Orion to compose two new John Rebus books. Later that very year, he got a Knighthood from HM Sovereign Elizabeth II for administrations to writing and noble cause as a feature of her Birthday Respects Rundown.

Rankin is the artist in the six-piece band Best Picture, framed by writers Kenny Farquharson (The Times) and Euan McColl (The Scotsman) in 2017, and highlighting Bobby Bluebell on guitar. They delivered the single “Isabelle” on Oriel Records in October 2017. They made their live introduction at the Kendal Calling live performance on 28 July 2018.

He has educated at the college and holds a contribution with the James Tait Dark Remembrance Prize. He lived in Tottenham, London, for a very long time and afterward rustic France for six while he fostered his vocation as a writer. Prior to turning into a full-time writer, he functioned as a grape picker, swineherd, taxman, liquor scientist, hey fi columnist, school secretary and troublemaker performer in a band called the Moving Pigs.