A week after the supposed murderer is convicted, an elderly man gives him an alibi. . . and the person who this is revealed to is none other than Gervase Fen, someone who will never be satiated by the obvious. . .
When the victim's head is sent floating down the river, the village's rural calm is shattered. Soon the corpses are multiplying, and the entire community is involved in the hunt for an unspecified amount of criminals. Whilst a rector, a major, the police and a journalist, desperate for the scoop of the century, chase false trails, it is left to Gervase Fen, Oxford don and amateur criminologist, to uncover the sordid truth.
Equal parts compelling, witty and ingenuous, this novel is a classic example of great British detective fiction.
First published in 1977, Glimpses of the Moon was Edmund Crispin's ninth and final novel.
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Review:
One of the undiscovered treasures of British crime fiction: Crispin's storytelling is intelligent, humane, surprising and rattling good fun (A.L. Kennedy)
Book Description:
Classic whodunnit cosy crime series featuring eccentric Oxford don Gervase Fen
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