"[MORSE IS] THE MOST PRICKLY, CONCEITED, AND GENUINELY BRILLIANT
DETECTIVE SINCE HERCULE POIROT".
--The New York Times Book Review
He meets her at a suburban party. They share a flirtation over their red
wine . . . and he doesn't see her again. It's the old familiar story for
Morse. Then one day he just happens to be in Jericho, where Anne Scott
lives. Nobody's home--and Morse should know since her door is unlocked
and he takes a quick look inside. Only later does Morse learn that the
lady was at home, just not alive. The jury's verdict at the inquest is
death by suicide. But that doesn't sit right with Morse, and he embarks
on his own investigation into the tangled private life of a lovely
woman, all the while feeling his own remorse of what might have been. .
. .
"You don't really know Morse until you've read him. . . . Viewers who
have enjoyed British actor John Thaw as Morse in the PBS Mystery!
anthology series should welcome the deeper character development in
Dexter's novels".
--Chicago Sun-Times
"A masterful crime writer whom few others match".
--Publishers Weekly