Having started my Banks habit up again I <b>won't be leaving it so long before I pick up my next Robinson thriller</b>
Evening Standard Online
<b>As ever, </b>Peter Robinson has constructed<b> a gripping, complex mystery</b> . . . his <b>legion of fans</b> will be <b>delighted</b>
The Sunday Times Crime Club
<i>Not Dark Yet</i> by Peter Robinson sees the author and his creation, Supt Alan Banks <b>on top form</b> in the 27th book in the series<i></i>
Peterborough Telegraph
<b>Complicated, unexpected and startling</b>, the story is all that, but Robinson brings all the disparate parts together <b>so cleverly</b> that the result on finishing the novel is <b>a satisfaction that all readers want at the end of a good book</b>
On-Magazine
This<b> series continues to be as thoughtful and intelligent as ever</b>, with the usual <b>bonus of the magnificent Dales</b>
Observer
Robinson <b>cleverly incorporates</b> the two plots, showing how police work has had to adapt in a very different climate<i></i>
The Sunday Times
As<b> gripping</b> as ever<i></i>
Choice Magazine
Fans will welcome this latest Banks adventure and revel in what Michael Connelly calls Robinson's '<b>clear eye for the telling detail</b>.'
Booklist
Robinson pulls the reader in with <b>deft characterizations,</b> <b>powerfully understated action scenes, and strong locales</b> . . . A s<b>trong addition to the Banks series </b>that suggests <b>tantalizing possibilities</b> for the next installment
Kirkus
<b>Bestseller</b> Robinson ably balances multiple plotlines in his <b>intricate</b> 27th novel
Publishers Weekly