The York Riddle (Book Eight) York Minster has stood for centuries as a monument to faith, continuity, and stone-bound memory. It was never meant to become a crime scene. When a senior bishop is found murdered inside the Minster's Chapter House, Detective Chief Inspector Evelyn Holloway is drawn into an investigation that resists every familiar category. The weapon is ceremonial. The violence precise. And carved into the victim's hand is a Latin phrase that is neither prayer nor scripture-but something far older, colder, and deliberately chosen. What begins as an ecclesiastical homicide quickly fractures into something else entirely. Hidden within medieval manuscripts, choir stalls, and sealed reliquaries, Holloway uncovers traces of a covert intelligence system that predates modern espionage yet remained active throughout the Cold War. A system that used stone, ritual, and belief as infrastructure. A system designed not to transmit information openly, but to hide it until the moment it was needed. As the case expands beyond York, drawing the attention of MI5 and foreign intelligence services, Holloway realises the murder was not meant to silence the bishop. It was meant to signal-to activate a dormant network that has survived by remaining beneath notice. The investigation becomes personal when evidence surfaces linking the conspiracy to Berlin-and to the unresolved disappearance of Holloway's brother years earlier. The truth, it seems, was never lost. It was preserved. Timed. Controlled. Set against the shadowed politics of late-Cold War Britain and the ancient authority of one of Europe's greatest cathedrals, The York Riddle is a meticulously researched crime thriller where history is not inert, institutions do not forget, and silence is never accidental. Truth does not disappear. It waits. Optional final line (if you want a sharper hook) Book Eight in the DCI Evelyn Holloway series, The York Riddle can be read as a standalone investigation or as part of an unfolding intelligence narrative that stretches from medieval stone to Cold War power. AUTHOR BIO Wayne J. Gombar is a historian and crime fiction author whose work explores the intersection of institutional power, secrecy, and moral responsibility. His writing is shaped by a long-standing interest in how systems-religious, political, and intelligence-based-preserve themselves across time, often at the expense of transparency and individual lives. Drawing on extensive research into British policing, Cold War intelligence practices, and historical archives, Gombar's fiction blends procedural realism with a deep sense of historical continuity. His novels are known for their disciplined pacing, restrained prose, and attention to period accuracy, particularly in the treatment of late-Cold War Europe and Britain's intelligence institutions. The York Riddle is the eighth novel in the DCI Evelyn Holloway series, an ongoing body of work that examines how the past survives within modern structures-and how truth is often hidden not through chaos, but through order. Gombar lives and works in the United States.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $20. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.