With
matchmaking on her mind, Ellen Brodie looks forward to a quiet weekend
with her husband, her son, and her favorite cousin’s attractive
daughter, Lorry Preston, who is visiting from Alberta. But the weekend
is doomed when Ellen's husband invites his two legal partners and
their quarreling wives; one of the legal partners includes his wife’s
wallflower sister; Ellen’s son brings his devastatingly handsome
best friend; a black sheep nephew shows up; and a new neighbor descends
on them because of renovations. If that wasn’t enough, Lorry
discovers a body in the Japanese garden.
The
law arrives in the persons of series characters Detective-Inspector
Paul Manziuk and Detective Constable Jaqueline Ryan.
Paul
Manziuk is a born cop who is tired. Maybe he’s having
a mid-life crisis; maybe it’s the recent changes in the department;
maybe just too many bad guys and too much work. In any case, he’s
a workaholic who hates incompetence and strives always to produce,
not simply an acceptable solution, but the right solution.
A high
school graduate, he started at the bottom, as a lowly cop on the beat,
and has worked his way up to Inspector, which is as much responsibility
as he wants. He’s an honest man, hard-working and not particularly
well-off. He has a long-suffering wife, Loretta, who is also of Ukrainian
ancestry, two sons aged 23 and 17, and a 21-year-old daughter.
A big
man, Manziuk is six foot five and two hundred thirty-five pounds,
some of it bulging a bit in the stomach area. He’s 47 years
old, with dark brown hair, balding on top. He has strong features,
not precisely handsome, but not unhandsome. Because of his size and
his thorough attention to detail, at first glance he appears slow
and ponderous of body and of mind, but actually he has fluid body
movement and a quick mind with a dry sense of humor. He cares, not
only about people but about stopping evil, and since a caring cop
is an easy mark, he uses gruffness as a wall of protection.
Jacqueline
Ryan is an eager young cop who knows she’s been promoted
primarily because she is a black woman and therefore a double minority.
However, she doesn’t hesitate to grasp the opportunity with
both hands. She’s determined to prove not only that she deserved
the promotion but also that she can be as good as any cop in the department—including
Manziuk.
Ryan
is 28, single, and of Jamaican ancestry. She’s had
a rather unstable home life, including her father's death when she
was 11, followed by her mother's remarriage and then divorce from
a somewhat violent white man. Ryan lives at home, along with her mom,
her grandmother, her aunt Vida, and her cousin Precious, so her extended
family is a strong factor in her life.
Ryan
is intelligent, rather fearless, extroverted, creative, and determined.
She tends to hide her fears or uncertainty under a veneer of humor.
But her tongue can be sharp as a needle if her crusading spirit is
touched.
Ryan
has a university degree in psychology and an advanced degree in criminology,
with marks at the top of her class. She’s fought hard for her
education and her position, and she finds it very difficult to relax
her defenses. Her life revolves around her career. Keeping her mind
sharp, her hand steady, eating healthy, exercising regularly—everything
is focused on her success as a policewoman. She sees men as rivals
and has little interest in dating. Just another distraction. As for
a home and family—maybe—in ten years or so, but only if
she changes a lot.
ISBN:
9780-9685495-6-8
Trade
paperback, 384 pages, 5.25" x 8.25" $12.95
US / $16.95 Cdn
Sample
Reviews
Publishers
Weekly
"Ontario police detectives Paul Manziuk and his new partner,
Jacqueline Ryan, make an odd team—he's white, an abrupt, patronizing
veteran, while she's a recently promoted, vivacious black woman—but
in Lindquist's debut mystery the two rub elbows and tempers to captivating
effect...Like Agatha Christie, Lindquist spends a lot of time developing
a believable web of personal relationships before introducing the
murders. However, she updates the Golden Age template with modern
police techniques (Ryan has degrees in both psychology and criminology).
The result is a cozy that will delight fans who appreciate solid,
modern detection.
Library
Journal
"Detailed characterization, surprising relationships, and nefarious
plot twists provide ample diversion; this first mystery is recommended
for most collections."
Carol
Ann Nelson (on Dorothy L)
“While this is not a "religious" mystery, it has a
preacher's daughter as a character in what is probably the best, most
realistic and honest portrayal I have read in contemporary fiction
of any sort. There are snippets of sound theology (nothing preachy)
as the young woman responds to the curiosity of fellow guests at a
house party. (This is an excellent read, in any case, very much in
the classic mystery structure, and it suckered me right up to the
end.)”
About.com/Mysteries
(Lorraine Gelly)
This is a fast paced book that was really hard to put down. At different
times I suspected each and every person who was present except for
the one who actually did it! Ms. Lindquist has taken a large cast
of characters and made them all into fascinating people, each of whom
has something to hide and/or some reason to resent the victim. They
are complex, as are their relationships and the writer has made them
believable.
The Charlotte Austin Review Ltd. (P. J. Nunn)
A recipe for murder and mystery that simmers slowly and emits an enticing
aroma reminiscent of earlier delights. It’s not a taut, edge
of the seat thriller but then it wasn’t intended to be….Shaded
Light is just that—a convergence of shadows. Purposely
patterned after Agatha’s best, readers are led down the garden
path where nothing is quite as it seems, and suspects appear at every
turn. The killer, revealed at the end, might be a surprise to some.
The true joy is in the investigation and the revelation of character
quirks and investigative processes. With any luck, we’ll see
more of Manziuk and Ryan in years to come.
Gene Stratton, author
This book is what I would call a cozy police procedural. It's the kind
I especially like: traditional closed community, lots of suspects, clues,
detection, and interesting characters. There is list of the major characters
in the front of the book, which is especially handy until we read enough
to lock the characters in our minds... Lots of skilled interrogation
provides leads, and of course the crime is finally solved. In the process
we are treated to varied and carefully delineated characters that hold
our attention, to good, uncliched, lucid writing, and to a well-sustained
pace as we try to match wits with the detectives... A well-plotted crime
novel that should appeal to all those who especially like this sub-genre.
Midwest
Book Review
"A cozy reminiscent of the best Agatha Christie had to offer....You
have humor, complications, and characters so real that you can just
about touch them and smell their sweat. Good stuff!”
Under the Covers (Harriet Klausner)
“Highly Recommended. N. J. Lindquist writes an entertaining Canadian
cozy that that will please police procedural fans. The motives of the
partygoers are fully developed as the audience sees first hand their
animosities and desires even before the first corpse is discovered.
Paul and Jillian make a fabulous team as their divergent personalities
harmoniously clash to the benefit of the reader. The who-done-it is
well designed with a wonderful investigation to add to the pleasure.
Pressure will be placed on Ms. Lindquist to provide more Manziuk and
Ryan investigations.”
I Love a Mystery
"Another weekend house party has gone awry—this one in the
newly acquired country estate of George and Ellen Brodie outside Toronto....N.J.
Lindquist works every twist imaginable in her modern cozy-meets-police-procedural,
Shaded Light...This excellently plotted novel is the first in a projected
series of Manziuk and Ryan mysteries. It kept me reading and guessing
until the very end."
The
Mystery Reader (Jennifer Monahan Winberry)
"An admirable first outing for a pair of detectives readers will
look forward to hearing from again.”
Joan
Hall Hovey, author of Nowhere to Hide
"Shaded Light is an excellent mystery in the classic sense—a
who-dunnit in the tradition of Agatha Christie, but for the 21st century.
Shaded Light would make a great 'Murder She Wrote' type of TV movie.
If you like to curl up with a good mystery, one that has humor, a thread
of romance, its share of twists and turns, pick up N.J. Lindquist's
Shaded Light, and follow Manziuk and Ryan through the maze
of clues and red herrings that will track a killer. I wasn't sure who
the killer was until the very end. I'm looking forward to the author's
next book in the series."
Elma
Schemenauer, author/editor of 80+ books
"Lawyer Peter Martin and his devastatingly beautiful trophy wife,
Jillian, captured my interest right from the beginning of this page-turning
mystery....The book, in the best Agatha Christie tradition, keeps the
reader guessing about which of the assembled weekenders tightened the
noose around the victim's neck....I didn't guess 'who done it' until
Lindquist was good and ready to tell me near the end of the book."
Murder and Mayhem Bookclub
"Unlike many authors who stage a murder and then try to connect
the suspects, Lindquist goes to great detail detailing the characters
and their relationships, along with the personalities of all the people
involved before the crime is committed. She then skillfully combines
old fashioned detective work with all the new modern police methods
used today with just enough humor to lighten up a grim subject. This
is a cozy that you will really cozy up to."
Rapport
Magazine, F. M. C.
“Lindquist writes a very compelling mystery that keeps you guessing
until the last minute. Through her ace detective combination of Paul
Manziuk and Jacquie Ryan, she leaves no stone unturned and entertains
many possibilities....Lindquist's story succeeds in keeping the reader's
interest and the take never wanes in its action. A very good novel by
an accomplished writer.”
The Pilot (Southern Pines, NC)
"This most enjoyable novel is written in the style of Agatha Christie...
Follow the clues to a bang-up ending."
I
Love a Mystery
"Another weekend house party has gone awry--this one in the newly
acquired country estate of George and Ellen Brodie outside Toronto...
N.J. Lindquist works every twist imaginable in her modern cozy-meets-police-procedural,
Shaded Light...This excellently plotted novel is the first
in a projected series of Manziuk and Ryan mysteries. It kept me reading
and guessing until the very end."
Linda Hall, author of 11 suspense novels including Dark
Water
"Shaded Light has all the elements of a classic mystery—a
body in the garden, a mansion full of suspects, and two mismatched police
officers. Combine them and you have a page-turning, keep-you-up-all-night
mystery where the murderer isn’t revealed until the very end.
This well-written first mystery by author N. J. Lindquist is reminiscent
of Agatha Christie; the houseguests gather, tensions run murderously
high, a body is discovered. Enter cops Paul Manziuk, a “cops’s
cop” who’s been a cop forever, and his partner, Jacquie
Ryan, young, black female who has had to work hard to get where she
is. Together they interview the houseguests. And some very curious clues
and red herrings emerge. If you are a mystery fan, Shaded Light,
the first in the Manziuk and Ryan series, will keep you reading until
the end."
Greensboro
Library
“Ellen Brodie hopes to outshine Martha Stewart as she plans the
perfect house party for the partners at her husband’s law firm.
However our hostess is confronted with a major faux pas when a corpse
is discovered in the garden. The party becomes mayhem even before it's
discovered that the guest list includes a blackmailer and perhaps a
murderer. Throw in two mismatched Ontario police detectives, stir and
you have brouhaha worthy of Agatha Christie.”
Susan Brandt, Managing Editor, Mennonite Brethren Herald
“I thoroughly enjoyed Shaded Light. It was an excellent
read.”
Ray
Wiseman, The Royal City Journal
“Shaded Light reads like a vintage Agatha Christie...[I]t majors
on the process of solving the crime, providing clues and red herrings,
and holding the reader in suspense until the very end...”
Selected
as one of the books in the Librarians
Choice 2000 Fiction for the Cincinnati
and Hamilton County library (along with Margaret Atwood, Barbara Kingsolver,
John LeCarre, Elmore Leonard, Val McDermid, Andrew Pypher, etc.).