The summer is unusually and rather miserably hot for York in northern England. Detective Chief Inspector John Shadow of the York Police is attending a cricket game. Cricket happens to be about the only sport he enjoys watching. And being outside has the advantage of catching whatever cool breezes might unexpectedly arise. His detective sergeant, Jimmy Chang, is there as well.
And the during a break in the game, the elderly man who’d been serving as scorekeeper is discovered dead in the scorekeeper’s shed. And rather gruesomely murdered, in fact. At first glance, Shadow wonders who could possibly have wanted to kill an elderly man who was simply keeping score.

H L Marsay
As Shadow and Chang will learn in A Summer Shadow, the ninth DCI John Shadow mystery by H L Marsay, the list of suspects is longer than one might initially think. It turns out that the man, a retired city planning officer, had something of a habit of expecting bribes from developers, and then, after retirement, expecting payment from people he was blackmailing. It almost becomes a case of who isn’t on the list of suspects.
It’s a fast-paced, entertaining story, with enough twists and turns to keep a slalom skier on constant alert. The case takes on an entirely different turn when a skeleton is discovered in the basement of the former newspaper building – and it might possibly be related to the death of the cricket scorekeeper.
A member of the Crime Writers Association, Marsay lives with her family in the city of York in England. She’s also published The Secrets of Hartwell trilogy and The Lady in Blue mysteries.
A Summer Shadow shares a number of characteristics with its eight predecessors – a DCI who is curmudgeonly on a good day, an irrepressible detective sergeant who keeps his bubbly charm intact no matter what his boss throws at him, and a stop at one if not several York restaurants. It’s great fun.
Related:
A Viking’s Shadow by H L Marsay.
A Ghostly Shadow by H L Marsay.
A Roman Shadow by H.L. Marsay.
A Forgotten Shadow by H L Marsay.
A Christmas Shadow by H L Marsay.
A Stolen Shadow by H.L. Marsay.
Betrayal at the Old Hall by H L Marsay.
Some Monday Readings
Calvin Coolidge, Christianity, & the American Founding – Nathaniel Urban at The Imaginative Conservative.
Why did police handcuff Henry Nowak? – Andrew Tettenborn at The Spectator.
Soiled Work – Adam Gustine at Comment Magazine.
Ground Zero in the Reading Crisis – Joel Miller at Miller’s Book Review.
Whistler in Wapping – Spitalfields Life.






