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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a romp of a book this is!,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
This is entertainment at its best. This book features authentic history and period detail cloaked in a rollicking story about wonderful characters. It is funny, touching and full of adventure. You'll love the hero (based on a real person), and the rest of the cast of characters are equally entertaining.The writing throughout is excellent, with sparkling dialogue and just enough period descritpion that you'll swear you are actually there in Carlisle in 1592. It is billed as a mystery, which is a little of a misnomer. There is a dead body and a search for the killer, but that is just one element among many. This book is hard to characterize; maybe "period adventure" fits it best. But even at its most exciting, it remains light-hearted. Highly recommended.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful historical mystery.,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
"Famine of Horses" is the first title in the Sir Robert Carey Mystery series, and what a promising series it is! I was pleased to hear Poisoned Pen Press will be reprinting the other three titles in the series. The year is 1592, the Elizabethan period. Sir Robert Carey, a courtier, along with his servant, Barnabus Cooke has left the Queens court. Sir Robert is now the Deputy Warden of an English Garrison run by his brother-in-law, Warden Lord Scrope. As the new Deputy Warden, Robert has his hands full trying to clean up a dishonest league of men, getting the garrison in order, solving the murder a young lad, putting together his brother-in-law's father's funeral, and finding out why there is such a shortage of horses - hence the title Famine of Horses. Our hero is a strong honest man; it was hard watching him take such a beating both physically from others and emotionally from the woman he loves. I found his servant to be funny, although a little uppity. Philly is a typical sister and I admire Robert for his loyalty to her. I'm still out on Philly's husband. The story lines pulled together quite well. I found the historical aspects of the mystery to be factual and fascinating. The speech and atmosphere seemed so clear; I could easily visualize the surroundings and the characters. It's a wonderful historical mystery. Brenda @ MyShelf.Com
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An entertaining swashbuckler,
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
Although a little thin in the mystery department, A Famine of Horses presents us with an interesting, entertaining character, authentic-seeming details of Elizabethan life, and lots of action. Sir Robert Carey arrives in the borderlands of England/Scotland to take on the job of Assistant Warden and has to cope with a jealous rival, a funeral procession lacking horses, a dead body with dangerous, revengeful relatives, and the arrival of his lady love--married, of course. How Sir Robert solves both mysteries, of the disappearing horses and the body, makes a fun read that you want to gallop through to the end! I have never read any of this series before and am looking forward to more.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable well written Renaissance mystery,
By "cloudia" (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
The setting is the Northern border of England. Our hero is Robert Carey, the son of Lord Hundson, Queen Elizabeth's Lord Chamberlain and her first cousin through their mothers', Mary and Ann Boleyn. Hundson is also, however, in this novel, historically he may not have been, the bastard son of Henry VIII. So Robert Carey, new deputy warden, more like sheriff really, of one the two main border keeps, is the grandson of the late great Tudor king himself. Unfortunately, Carey's noble bloodlines and his courtier experience is not going to matter a jot to the rough hewn Scottish and English clans around the border. Their main interests are feuding, cattle and horse "reiving," an old word for rustling, and occasionally killing each other. Carey's brother-in-law, Lord Scrope has just become Warden of the March after the death of his father. Unfortunately for everyone Lord Scrope is not exactly brilliant, even if his wife, Carey's sister, Lady Philadelphia, is plenty smart. Meanwhile, the dead body of Sweetmilk Graham, favorite son of one of the leading clan chiefs, Jock of Peartree, has just been discovered on an old battlefield. Jock thinks he knows who did it and wants to pursue a vendetta against Carey's new local man, Seargent Dodd, while Carey isn't so sure, and would like to introduce the concept of Justice to the lawless frontier. Not that anyone on the lawless frontier cares. Carey is willing to go to great lengths and place himself in the middle of a mysterious anti-royal plot to prove his mettle, solve the mystery of Sweetmilk's murder, bring the murderer to Justice, and incidentally find out why all the horses south of the border have suddenly disappeared. But his love, Lady Elizabeth Widdrington, is the real reason he's turned up in these parts. And she's very concerned about his predilection for adventure, a little bit less concerned about her husband. It's an entertaining story, with fun yet believable characters, and even the hero makes human sometimes stupid and serious mistakes. The dialect reads beautifully, though I was occasionally confused as to where exactly the different "Marches" or border forts were.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Famine of Horses,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
Here is a very enjoyable book, set on the 16th-century Scottish border and written in a stark, clear style. Readers of Barbara Hambly's work may well appreciate this.Chisholm's differences from the standard run of historical mystery authors start with her (?) writing style, which is spare, and reminds me of that of Cecelia Holland. It is also not devoid of humor, and the dialogue crackles along. The setting is wonderful: very different from the norm, but extremely lawless and full of potential pitfalls for the characters. As a nonspecialist in the Renaissance, I didn't find any particular historical errors, though some readers may be confused by the references to the two separate courts, the Scottish one of which was headed by the man who would soon become James I of England. The women are perhaps a little independent for the time period, but it seems plausible enough given the setting. Characters here stand out. I particularly liked the lugubrious Sergeant Dodd and his fiery wife, but Robert Carey, perhaps the only man on the Border with a concept of impartial justice, is also appealing. Assorted hard cases and Border ruffians fill out an entertaining cast. Chisholm's names for characters are wonderful. The plot is an exciting one, involving murder, horse theft, kingnapping schemes, and assorted brawls. Though the larger themes have a certain implausibility about them, and some of the elements could be better described, there's little real cause for complaint.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the Sir Robert Carey novels by PF Chisholm,
By
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
I wrote this introduction for the Poisoned Pen Press edition of the third Carey novel.
*** P.F. Chisholm writes You-Are-THERE! books. A You-Are-THERE! book is a book that can make you feel the nap of Sir Robert Carey's black velvet doublet beneath your fingertips. A You-Are-THERE! book can make you smell the sewer in the streets of Elizabethan Carlisle. A You-Are-THERE! book can make you taste the ale at Bessie Storey's alehouse outside the Captain's Gate at Berwick garrison, and a You-Are-THERE! book can make you hear the arquebuses firing at Netherby tower. A You-Are-THERE! book can make you feel like you're ready to pack up and move THERE, if only you had a time machine. THERE, in the case of P.F. Chisholm, is the nebulous and ever-changing border between Scotland and England in 1592, the thirty-fourth year of the reign of Good Queen Bess, five years after the Spanish Armada, fifty-one years after Henry VIII beheaded his last queen. Reivers with a high disregard for the allegiance or for that matter, the nationality of their victims roved freely back and forth across this border during this time, pillaging, plundering, assaulting and killing as they went. Into this scene of mayhem and murder gallops Sir Robert Carey, the central figure of the mystery novels by P.F. Chisholm, including A Famine of Horses, A Season of Knives, A Surfeit of Guns and A Plague of Angels, brought to America (at last!) in paperback by Barbara Peters and the Poisoned Pen Press. Sir Robert is the Deputy Warden of the West March, and his duty is to enforce the peace on the Border. Since everyone on the English side is first cousin once removed to everyone on the Scottish side, it is frequently difficult to tell his men which way to shoot. The first in the series, A Plague of Angels, begins with Sir Robert's first day on the job and the murder of Sweetmilk Geordie Graham. In A Season of Knives Sir Robert is framed and tried for the murder of paymaster Jemmy Atkinson. On night patrol in A Surfeit of Guns, he uncovers a plot to smuggle arms across the Border. In the fourth book (and why hasn't there been a fifth since, pray tell?), A Plague of Angels, Chisholm removes Sir Robert to London, where he encounters a bit player named Will Shakespeare involved in a plot that gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "bad actor." Sir Robert is as delightful a character as any who ever thrust and parried his way into the pages of a work of fiction, in this century or out of it. He is handsome, intelligent, charming, capable, as quick with a laugh as he is with a sword. He puts the buckle into swash. He puts the court into courtier; in fact, his men's nickname for him is the Courtier. The ensemble surrounding him is equally engaging. There is Sergeant Henry Dodd, Sir Robert's second-in-command, who does "his best to look honest but thick." There is Lord Scrope, Sir Robert's brother-in law and feckless superior, who sits "hunched like a heron in his carved chair." There is Philadelphia, Sir Robert's sister, "a pleasing small creature with black ringlets making ciphers on her white skin." There is Barnabus Cooke, Sir Robert's manservant, who thinks longingly of the time when he "raked in fees from the unwary who thought, mistakenly, that the Queen's favourite cousin might be able to put a good word in her ear." And there is the Lady Elizabeth Widdrington, Sir Robert's love and the wife of another man, who is "hard put to it to keep her mind on her prayers: Philadelphia's brother would keep marching into her thoughts." There is hand-to-hilt combat with villains rejoicing in names like Jock of the Peartree, and brushes with royalty in the appearance of King James of Scotland, who's a little in love with Sir Robert himself. And who can blame him? Sir Robert is imminently lovable, and these four books are a rollicking, roistering revelation of a time long gone, recaptured for us in vivid and intense detail in this series.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Wonderful Historical Hot Trod through the Borders!,
By Greg House (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
It is now, some fifteen years since I first came across this the first of PF Chisholm's Sir Robert Carey novels set in the politically complex Tudor England of the 1590s'. Queen Elizabeth's fleet has beaten back the famed Armada and that threat at least for time has diminished and the kingdom basks in relative peace. However the northern border with Scotland it is not so quiet. Murder, cattle reiving and tower burning are all too common occurrences. So one more dead body found in the Debatable Lands shouldn't make that much difference, except when it's a Graham, and the head of that surname has a nasty reputation for vengeance. In to this cauldron of trouble steps Sir Robert Carey newly appointed Deputy Warden of the Western Marches. What Sergeant Dodd of the Carlisle garrison thinks of his new commander probably shouldn't be put in print, but between them Cary and Dodd they have to solve two mysteries the ill timed murder of a Graham and the sudden `Famine of Horses of the title'. Alright that hasn't given away anything that isn't apparent from a quick view of the back cover blurb. As to the quality of the story, in short it is superb. PF Chisholm has a fine grasp of the character's traits, they are all so very human and compelling. Sergeant Dodd for one is the epitome of the dour northerner with a wry sense of humour and an intelligence that shouldn't be underrated. As for Cary he comes with a very interesting history, he has to head north to escape his London creditors and recoup the fortune he doesn't have. I'm not give much away in saying that his father Lord Hunsdon is the son of Mary Boleyn and that it is said he bore an uncanny resemblance to Henry VIII. That hint alone should wet your interest. The difficulties and scrapes Robert Carey gets into and his ahh unique `solutions' very much carry the tale along to its not quite expected conclusion. In it all PF Chisholm has worked very hard to recreate the Borders region of the 1590's as a living breathing culture alive with plots, mischief and mayhem. She hasn't stretched facts or come up with wildly improbable story lines like some period writers. Instead this is honestly engaging with a very dry sense of humour. Most of all it's a damned enjoyable romp for anyone who likes historical fiction. And yes it is certainly worth the five stars I gave it!
Regards Gregory House The author of the Liberties of London
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excelent historic mystery novel!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
P.F. Chisholm used Sir Robert Carey's diaries, from the Elizabethan period, to create these incredibly entertaining series starting with "A Famine of Horses". She recreates the lives of the people living in that period so well that you feel as if you were living among them. They were dangerous times and the law was not developed as it's nowadays. To survive, Sir Robert Carey, who is sent to serve as Deputy Warden at Carlisle has to be very creative. With the help of Sargent Dodd and his men they manage to solve the problem of the disapearance of horses and tackle the corruption existing among other courtiers and very scarry northeners.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Fun Historical Mystery!,
By Tamela Mccann "taminator40" (Nashville, TN USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) (Paperback)
This little gem of a book begins with Robert Carey, cousin of Queen Elizabeth I, arriving at his new post of Deputy Warden near the Scots border. Robert is a thoroughly likeable character; while he dresses like a courtier, he gets on well with almost everyone and he is eager to do his job well. Upon arriving, he is thrust into both a murder mystery and a ring of horse thieves. Carey attempts to solve both with wit and subterfuge, sometimes brilliantly and sometimes witlessly.
I enjoyed this title though the plot really became interesting after Carey decides he is going to go undercover to glean information. The fact that Carey is not infalliable adds fun and a human touch that make this a fast, enjoyable read. Definitely on the light side, Chisholm has created characters who are interesting and endearing, if at times a bit too modern. Overall, this book is a good romp, and recommended for all historical mystery lovers. |
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A Famine of Horses (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries (Paperback)) by P. F. Chisholm (Paperback - January 1, 2000)
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