A review by lucyb
The Jewel That Was Ours by Colin Dexter

3.0

As always, Dexter's sophisticated plotting and gift for evoking atmosphere are a treat. As I've noted in reviews of other volumes in the series: if you're put off by Latin tags, dirty jokes, or dirty jokes disguised as Latin tags, Inspector Morse is probably not your cup of tea. But I enjoyed this, although, as a devotee of the Rules of Fair Play for detective stories devised by Christie et al., I could quibble with the amount of disclosure Dexter allows to the reader before the denouement. The characters of both Morse and Lewis--and their relationship--are nicely developed in this installment, though. And I thought the women in the story were more thoughtfully and interestingly developed than sometimes... a conscious bow to a feminist, or at least to a female, readership? evolution as an author? I don't know, but I relished it.