cover image Shadow Men: The Tangled Story of Murder, Media, and Privilege That Scandalized Jazz Age America

Shadow Men: The Tangled Story of Murder, Media, and Privilege That Scandalized Jazz Age America

James Polchin. Counterpoint, $28 (368p) ISBN 978-1-64009-600-4

Polchin (Indecent Advances) combines a novelist’s gift for narrative and a journalist’s eye for detail in this riveting work of true crime. In 1922, the body of 19-year-old Clarence Peters was found on the side of a road in Westchester County, N.Y. The bullet that killed Peters only pierced his shirt, not his outer garments, leading police to believe that the body had been moved from where the murder occurred. Days afterward, New Rochelle police commissioner Walter Ward came forward to confess, claiming he acted in self-defense. According to Ward’s testimony, he was being blackmailed by Peters’s gang, to whom he’d already paid $30,000, and when Peters pointed a pistol at him during a confrontation, Ward wrested the weapon away, and fired it to save his life. Doubts about his account were widespread, and Polchin packs the narrative with cliffhangers as he takes readers through the case’s often-shocking twists, including the involvement of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who had become a devout spiritualist and claimed to be able to commune with Peters’s spirit. It’s an entertaining account of an obscure yet fascinating crime. Agent: Deirdre Mullane, Mullane Literary Assoc. (June)