'Mel Starr has done it again with another brilliant Sir Hugh de
Singleton medieval mystery to keep readers guessing until the very end.
[.] I was there at the Queen's College, dining on pottage, getting
soaked in the rain in fourteenth-century Oxford - Mel always draws you
into the experience.' Toni Mount, author of the Sebastian Foxley murder
mystery series
One of Master John Wycliffe's scholars is found dead after a
thunderstorm. Was he struck by lightning, or was there something more
sinister to his death?
Scholar Richard Sabyn, a particularly obnoxious fellow, was believed to
have been struck by lightning. However, Master Wycliffe believes
otherwise and calls upon Sir Hugh de Singleton for help. Sir Hugh shares
Wycliffe's suspicions and launches a private investigation, learning
that it might indeed be possible to make it look as though a man has
died from a lightning strike. But who would go to all that effort, and
why?
When fellow scholar Simon Duby dies, it raises even more questions and
suspicions. What is the connection between the two men? Sir Hugh
believes a bronze pot, a bucket of urine, and a small quantity of
charcoal and brimstone may hold the answer. During a bleak 1375, can he
survive the insidious plague and several attempts on his life as he
continues his quest for truth?