"[Morse is] the most prickly, conceited, and genuinely brilliant
detective since Hercule Poirot".
--The New York Times Book Review
"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
Beautiful Sylvia Kaye and another young woman had been seen hitching a
ride not long before Sylvia's bludgeoned body is found outside a pub in
Woodstock, near Oxford. Morse is sure the other hitchhiker can tell him
much of what he needs to know. But his confidence is shaken by the cool
inscrutability of the girl he's certain was Sylvia's companion on that
ill-fated September evening. Shrewd as Morse is, he's also distracted by
the complex scenarios that the murder set in motion among Sylvia's
girlfriends and their Oxford playmates. To grasp the painful truth, and
act upon it, requires from Morse the last atom of his professional
discipline.
"Few novelists write books as intelligent and deliciously frightening as
those by Colin Dexter. . . . What Mr. Dexter does so well, so
brilliantly, is weave a thick, cerebral story chock-full of literary
references and clever red herrings".
--The Washington Times
"A MASTERFUL CRIME WRITER WHOM FEW OTHERS MATCH".
--Publishers Weekly