'[Souhami] builds up a vivid portrait of postwar Britain ... riveting, both historically and as a literary tour de force' Literary Review. (Literary Review)
'a brilliantly formulated and well-written account of a tawdry murder that shines a bright light on postwar austerity England' Jenny Diski. (Jenny Diski)
'Souhami has seen the missing piece, and with great clarity and attention to its cultural meanings as well as to the pathos of the protagonists, re-created this casual murder, showing it to be as charmless and petty as the times themselves' London Review of Books. (London Review of Books)
'The murder of an unknown woman in 1946 might not, at first, seem a sufficiently weighty subject for as distinguished a writer as Diana Souhami ... [but she] places this murder in the context of an era of war crimes, the Holocaust and the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, suggesting profound and disturbing philosophical questions about the nature of crime and punishment' Metro (Metro)
'Compelling' Jewish Chronicle. (Jewish Chronicle)
'Souhami evokes these drab, joyless years with painful brilliance, so that one can almost feel the shabby poverty and smell the foggy, coal-dust filled air' The Spectator. (Spectator)
'Souhami superbly captures the shattered mood in this era, and shows us ordinary men and women grappling with new definitions of evil' Mail on Sunday. (Mail on Sunday)
'Souhami's dissection of the murder is completely engrossing in its insistence that fatality is about fallible human beings' The Times. (The Times)
'With great skill, Souhami tells a sad, sordid true-crime story' Saga magazine. (Saga magazine)
Murder at Wrotham Hill is at once a subversive murder story and a stunning evocation of forties Britain. Two strikingly different people eke out lives on the margins of a society shattered by six long years of war. Dagmar Petrzywalski is a gentle, eccentric spinster who saves every penny and lives by herself in a hut. Harold Hagger is a small-time crook, a man of shabby impulses and bad lies. Diana Souhami takes their chance meeting on a lonely autumn morning as the starting point for a haunting and tragic tale that stays with you long after you've turned the last page.