From Booklist
In the middle of a frustrating late autumn golf game, Superintendent John Lambert and Detective Sergeant Bert Hook are summoned to a churchyard where a body has been discovered. Through the determined sleuthing of Lambert, Hook, and their police colleagues, the nameless corpse quickly becomes a man with a full past--and whose every friend and lover seems a prime suspect. This latest Lambert and Hook mystery moves at a good pace and offers a tough crime. Along with believable descriptions of English police work and some dry golf humor, Gregson offers touching subplots about Lambert's and Hook's family lives. Gregson's other procedural series, starring Percy Peach, features a more engaging copper hero, but Lambert and Hook are perfectly likable, and the series is recommended for its gritty realism and hard-to-solve mysteries. John Rowen
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Kirkus Reviews
Malice Aforethought ($25.00; Jan.; 224 pp.; 0-7278-5454-2) Gregson (To Kill a Wife, p. 676) borrows one of the most famous titles in crime-fiction history for this tale of a John Doe found in a Broughton Ash churchyard. Amiably dickering Supt. John Lambert and Det. Sgt. Bert Hook squeeze the properly British interrogations, which remain civilized even at their most menacing, in between rounds of golf in this low-key whodunit. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
