In the
Exile on Princes Street foreword to
Rebus: The Early Years, Rankin says he wrote this book shortly after giving his father a
James Kelman book (the type of book he was studying at the time) and being shocked when his father said it wasn't "written in English" and had no story; Rankin says this made him rethink what type of writer he wanted to be. He wrote
Knots with the idea of updating
Robert Louis Stevenson's
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde into then-modern Edinburgh, with Rebus as the Jekyll figure (the book implies for a while that Rebus himself is unwittingly the killer) and he put Rebus in the same road, Arden Street, that he himself was living in. He states he was shocked to find out later that everyone thought he'd written a crime book, as he was unfamiliar with the genre. In an interview with
The Guardian, he speaks of the stylistic details he would have liked to change, saying: "I was a young man in love with language, striving for a voice and sometimes overreaching." == Reception ==