Customer Reviews:
TIP TOP May 18, 2008 Roderick Spode (London) This is very intelligent writing and engages the reader at many differing levels from the outset. A classic of the genre.
Dexter continues his Morse code! March 2, 2002 Donald Barber 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
It's certainly a crime of the most perplexing sort--so perplexing (and convoluted) that it would take an Inspector Morse to separate the "facts" from "fiction"! In Colin Dexter's Morse novel, one of a long series, the erswhile policeman finds himself "drowning" in a sea of clues, lies, innuendos, red herrings. A dismembered body is fished out of the Oxford Canal--only the torso remains and Morse and Sergeant Lewis are up to the challenge. As if often the case, Oxford University is involved. A don has disappeared, leaving about a plethora of clues. It's the long and winding road down the halls of academe for the Thames Valley police and the trail bounces back and forth to London and some of its seedier spots.The scenario seems set with an opening scene out of World War II, when the Gilbert brothers (local boys from the Oxford area) face the horrors of the battle of El Alamein, the youngest of the three dieing. The company commander, a Lt. Browne-Smith just happens now to be a don in question at Oxford. Dexter pulls on punches as he permits Morse and Lewis to take on this bizarre--certainly macabre--case. With his usual erudite style, the author's clever, at times witty and ascerbic, plot and character development takes the reader for a great ride (and read). Written in 1983, long before, one presumes, Dexter had envisioned Morse's demise ("The Remorseful Day"), "The Riddle of the Third Mile" is carefully orchestrated, with the climactic results rushing in with a top crescendo! (The reader must be a bit careful as the facts and events come almost as an onslaught!) The tone of this episode, despite its shocking crime scenario, is one of greater levity than some of his later books ("The Wench Is Dead," for instance),but it was written some 15 years before "Remorseful Day," and the tone and atmosphere are naturally different. This one gives additional insight into Morse's earlier (younger) days, of his stepping down from Oxford and of the first love of his life (Morse is ever the eternal optimist when it comes to beautiful women!). Dexter also fills this one with his usual literary allusions, clever references, and an incredible vocabulary (probably only equated by Dame P.D. James or William Buckley, themselves!). I found this one probably to be the most delightful and intriguing of the Morse series, perhaps because of the levity he chooses to exhibit. Regardless, readers of the Morse code will find this episode in fine keeping with the others. A good read!
Whodunnit? June 27, 2000 J. Mcgregor 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
As is usual with Morse, I'd lost track of the plot by the time I'd read the synopsis of it on the dustjacket. Rest assured, however, that the old bugger will sort it all out for you in the end. Which he did, but if he'd arrested Lewis in the final chapter, I'd probably have gone along with it.
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