A well-done mystery told from the point of view of Del Finwick, a sophomore at Neenah, Wisconsin high school during the early 1970s. Del's father, a deputy sheriff, has been murdered while on the job by the so-called Highway 41 Killer. In the face of the Sheriff's inattention to the case, Del and his friends begin to look for clues and set off a series of events that threatens Del's life as well as the lives of the remaining members of his family. What makes Eleven Miles to Oshkosh compelling is the author's faithfulness to the setting (even I found the segments on fishing and duck hunting of interest) and the complexity of its secondary characters, who surprise both Del and the reader throughout the book. Though my local library shelved this in the Young Adult section, I think adult readers who like cozy mysteries will also warm to this novel, owing to its sympathetic main character and the vivid school-friends-home-church community who both challenge and support him. Excellent.