This true crime story gave insight into a case that most people thought was pretty clear-cut. A terrible man attacked someone due to paranoia over his drug-dealing, and murdered an innocent man. But that is not the case at all. Robin Bowles presented a complete selection of evidence, from both sides of the case, and indeed of all sides, and, ultimately, she gave a definitive conclusion, which was that Bradley John Murdoch did not murder Peter Falconio. While Bowles did not offer any definite conclusion as to who did, or alternatively if Falconio was still alive, she suggested that perhaps the man who did the most to frame Murdoch, his former friend and now greatest enemy James Hepi, was perhaps the man most likely, at least if a murder had occurred, and alternatively that Falconio had simply faked his own death and was alive and well somewhere. Of course, just because Hepi framed Murdoch doesn't mean that Hepi is the murderer - just that he was prepared to do anything he could, including lying, to get Murdoch thrown in jail. It could well be that someone else, one of a million possible suspects, had done it, or, perhaps more likely, that that car that dropped Joanne Lees off just before she was found, had inside Peter Falconio, who was taken off to safety to live his new life. Of course, it could have been something much more sinister, that Peter Falconio was murdered, and that Lees was forced to lie about who did it, or else she would be killed. There are many different possibilities. What is clear is that the possibility that we ran with, that Bradley John Murdoch murdered him, is perhaps the least likely scenario, not only improbable but completely and utterly impossible. Perhaps one day Murdoch will have an appeal heard and be set free, or perhaps not. In an era of fake news, this novel is a light in the dark.