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Elizabeth George relies heavily on misdirection--there are almost too many suspects for this killing because Brouard was a games-player with a distinctly iffy set of personal habits and relatives. Not least among the plot strands is the whole question of Guernsey's occupation by the Germans in WW2; Brouard's involvement in a scheme to establish a Museum of Occupation precipitates an entirely different set of tragic events at a tangent to those surrounding his own death. This is a book impressively pervaded by vividly evoked places and by the legacies of history, both national and family; the eventual revelations about specific guilt and innocence are secondary, in a sense, to the implication that we are all involved, dangerously, in each other's lives. --"Roz Kaveney"