34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A medieval delight...., April 1, 2009
This review is from: Grave Goods (Mistress of the Art of Death) (Hardcover)
This third book in the 'Mistress of the Art of Death' series finds the Salerno trained forensic physician Adelia Aguilar dispatched to the newly destroyed Glastonbury Abbey by Henry II to investigate a pair of skeletons that Henry hopes will turn out to be King Arthur and his queen. Once there, Adelia becomes entangled with a most charming, if odorous, group of rogues who are attempting to prove the innocence of one of their deceased brethren. Add to this her friend Emma who has gone missing, a saintly abbot, an innkeeper who faints from fright when meeting Adelia, an isle of lepers, haunting dreams, and, of course, Rowly, bishop of St. Albans and father of Adelia's daughter, Allie.
If there are more delightful literary characters than Franklin's Adelia, Rowly, and King Henry II, I can't think who they are. I would say that characterization is her strong point; however, her historical research is meticulous (though it never burdens the reader) and her plotting is expert. So what's not to like?
If you haven't read Franklin, by all means start with the first book in the series; the characters actually develop and their relationships change. And keep in mind that Franklin is Diana Norman; the books written under the Norman name are worth a look too.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good But Not the Best, March 11, 2010
I read "The Serpent's Tale" before reading the first book in the series and I was impressed that "Serpent" was linked to "Mistress of the Art of Death," but not dependent on it. This third book is not as strong in that respect. Further, the first two books presented realistically drawn characters with both Adelia and Rowley defying the physical attributes of most fictional heroes. (She's no great beauty; neither does he look like Fabio.) So, I expected the writer to more forcefully develop the lead characters - and to see more of Mansur and Glytha, the supporting cast. While "Grave Goods" continues with the complicated relationship between the medical detective and the bishop, it just doesn't hit the high notes like in the earlier books. Still, Franklin tells a good, history-based tale with interesting twists to the several related mysteries. Another good touch: Again, the Author's Note at the end explains the areas where the writer took liberties with historical record to advance the story. I just hope that as we see in too many fiction series, that the writer isn't running out of steam.
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22 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Delightful Book 3 to a Historical Forensics Mystery Series Featuring a Female Protagonist, March 19, 2009
This review is from: Grave Goods (Mistress of the Art of Death) (Hardcover)
[ The Mistress of the Art of Death series recounts the adventures in medieval England of Adelia Vesuvia Rachel Aguilar, a rare woman trained as a medical doctor in the famous schools of Salerno. Under the summons of King Henry II, in Book I, Adelia arrives in England to solve a mystery concerning the murders of many children. Though disgusted by him at first, she meets and falls in love with Sir Rowley Picot, but chooses to undergo an unofficial relationship with him in order to maintain her independence. In Book II (The Serpent's Tale), the King's favorite concubine Rosamund is found dead, and Adelia is summoned to solve the mystery. Adelia has settled into a home in the fens with Glytha--and Rowley's child, whom she is determined to raise without him. (After Adelia had spurned married life with him, Rowley had taken the King's offer to become Bishop Rowley.) Book III in this historical fiction saga (with its own quirky dose of forensics) puts Adelia in the midst of the uncovering of truth in legend. ]
The story begins in the year 1154 A.D., when a cathedral-destroying earthquake strikes Glastonbury, England, creating a fissure in the earth--where the alleged remains of King Arthur and Queen Guinevere's bodies would be found. Twenty years later, King Henry II fights to gain his lands in Wales--against a people who don't recognize him as King, believing that King Arthur (who lived in the 6th century) is still alive. Henry thus summons Adelia away from her otherwise normal life to investigate the truth of Arthur's bones--and, he hopes, to prove to the Welsch that their so-called King had long ago died.
Adelia is traveling with Lady Emma Wolvercote (the abbey choirgirl in Book II, raped by the late Lord Wolvercote), when the King's men arrive to take her off course. Arriving in Glastonbury, she and her manservant Mansur (officially, the "doctor," to save Adelia from ignorant accusations of witchcraft), are greeted by the abbot, whom, with suspicious openness, allows them to inspect the remains of the alleged bones that are believed to be Arthur and Guinevere's. As expected, there would be those resistant to the discovery of the truth behind the bones, and our heroes thus narrowly escape death several times from attempts to put them off.
Although once a woman baffled and embarassed by how others could sacrifice their life for the love of a man, Adelia--on the brinks of death by aphyxiation with Rowley in a sealed tunnel--finds that she would be ready to do that for Rowley. Our heroine and her beloved survive, of course, but the incident would set about a course of confessions and revelations that would explain both Arthur's bones and the relations between several unlikely parties in this small town.
Ripe with both historical and forensics details, the novel entertains and educates without detracting much from the story. Most memorable is a touching conversation in a rose-garden in summer between Adelia and Emma on love and circumstances, wherein Adelia, in her pedantic nature, goes off a tangent discussing historical contraceptions, notably venerable pessaries soaked in vinegar. Another interesting fact revealed in the story is that preserves or Worcestershire sauce are the best means to clean historic swords preserved in muck--this was used to reveal that a rusted sword that had saved Adelia's life was, in fact, Excaliber. But, though the story is lovely at times, it is a work of fiction. Although Henry II was reportedly its owner at one point during his reign, no one now knows where Excaliber is; the author admits in the endnote that the dates of certain events are shifted to render them in accords with other events. Nevertheless, who's to say things didn't happen as they did? Even the study of history in academia is prone to changes, as new findings challenge existing notions.
Interestingly, unlike its predecessors, Book III ends in suspense--as one of the villains Adelia narrowly escapes in the woods looks on at her passing in menace... I await Book IV!
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