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        <dc:title>The Wench is Dead</dc:title>
        <dc:creator opf:file-as="Dexter, Colin" opf:role="aut">Colin Dexter</dc:creator>
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        <dc:date>2010-04-15T22:00:00+00:00</dc:date>
        <dc:description>&lt;div&gt;Fans will not be disappointed in the reappearance of the irascible yet loveable 
Inspector Morse, the Oxford policeman who investigates the underside of his 
beautiful city. This time Dexter employs his lucid prose to describe a 
century-old murder on the meandering Oxford canal, a case chanced upon by Morse 
in his reading while hospitalized for an ulcer. Inevitably, there will be 
comparisons with Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time , in which her sleuth 
simultaneously convalesces and cogitates upon Richard III, accused of the murder 
of his two nephews. Dexter's tale is the better of the two. The interior 
narrative, that of a fetching young woman who meets death during a 
night-shrouded canal voyage, is placed in a contemporary story in which Morse 
engages in marvelous repartee with his loyal Sergeant Lewis, with a winsome 
female librarian and with others who aid him in researching the crime. A 
surprising and inspired solution concludes a jolly good read that juxtaposes 
past and present Oxford with imagination and finesse. A new series of Inspector 
Morse mysteries is airing on PBS. 20,000 first printing; Mystery Guild 
alternate. &lt;br&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</dc:description>
        <dc:publisher>Colin Dexter</dc:publisher>
        <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
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