"This is a good murder story, well told, with all the additional pleasures that a knowledgeable tour guide to old China can provide. Grateful readers could scarcely ask for more." - Joseph Kanon, author of Istanbul Passage, in The Washington Post
"Never less than fascinating... one of the best portraits of between-the-wars China that has yet been written." - The Wall Street Journal
"Midnight in Peking is both a detective story and a social history, and therefore - as it should - always keeps the hunt for Pamela's killers somewhere near the center of the narrative. [Paul French] is a wonderfully dexterous guide" - Jonathan Spence in The New York Review of Books
"A crime story set among sweeping events is reminiscent of Graham Greene, particularly The Third Man, while French's terse, tightly-focussed style has rightly been compared to Chandler. Midnight in Peking deserves a place alongside both these masters." - The Independent
"A page-turning and fascinating true crime book. This is a genre-breaker that captures the atmosphere of 1930s Peking." - The Bookseller [selected as One to Watch]
"...the most talked-about read in town this year." - The New Yorker's Page-Turner Blog
"Midnight in Peking is true-crime writing at its best, full of vivid characters, an exotic locale, secrets galore, and a truly bewildering mystery." - The Christian Science Monitor
"...A compulsively readable true crime work in the tradition of Devil in the White City." - The Atlantic.com
"Not only does Mr. French succeed in solving the crime, he resurrects a period that was filled with glitter as well as evil, but was never, as readers will appreciate, known for being dull." - The Economist
"An engrossing read" - Oprah.com
"In today's Beijing, French's portrait feels surprisingly germane." - The Los Angeles Times
"Part historical docudrama, part tragic opera... [French] tells this sorry tale with the skill of an Agatha Christie." - The Financial Times