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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fine medieval mystery
The travelers on their way to Canterbury stop at Maldon, Essex where rumors abound that ghosts and killers live. A debate breaks out whether there are spirits haunting the woods as some reject the concept of ghosts.

The Clerk of Oxford makes an anecdotal case in support of the paranormal. He tells the tale of his peer Ralph Mortimer the clerk of...
Published on February 21, 2009 by Harriet Klausner

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Another good yarn
Paul Doherty, one of the most prolific mystery writers working today, has produced another in his Canterbury Tales series where the pilgrims tell stories guaranteed to make the flesh creep. And this one is the creepiest to date.

Here he explores alternate realities - one of the main characters is a spirit and her character development is that of a spiritual character...

Published on May 27, 2003 by Valerie Adolph


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Another good yarn, May 27, 2003
This review is from: A Haunt of Murder (Hardcover)
Paul Doherty, one of the most prolific mystery writers working today, has produced another in his Canterbury Tales series where the pilgrims tell stories guaranteed to make the flesh creep. And this one is the creepiest to date.

Here he explores alternate realities - one of the main characters is a spirit and her character development is that of a spiritual character rather than a human.

If you like your spine tingled, this tale will do it. It's full of action, with beautiful maidens (albeit dead) handsome swains and evil doers. Paul Doherty always delivers historical accuracy, with a full dose of the religious and supernatural fears and feelings of the time.

Doherty is a master story teller - the pace is crisp and the setting and characters carry the tale well.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fine medieval mystery, February 21, 2009
This review is from: A Haunt of Murder (Hardcover)
The travelers on their way to Canterbury stop at Maldon, Essex where rumors abound that ghosts and killers live. A debate breaks out whether there are spirits haunting the woods as some reject the concept of ghosts.

The Clerk of Oxford makes an anecdotal case in support of the paranormal. He tells the tale of his peer Ralph Mortimer the clerk of Ravenscroft who in 1381 was researching documents at Ravenscroft Castle in hopes of finding a clue that will lead him to Brythnoth's legendary treasured jeweled cross. So far he has been unsuccessful. Meanwhile he, his fiancée Beatrice Arrowner and some friends were on the greens by the castle celebrating May Day. However, Beatrice apparently fell from a parapet to her death. Shattered, the despondent Ralph believes she was murdered though his friends insist a tragic accident occurred. He vows to find Beatrice's killer, but he will soon learn there is more to life than death as his beloved is fighting evil demanding her soul while she waits for her beloved to uncover her killer.

Perhaps the lead author of the medieval mystery (besides the Canterbury Tales, there are also the tales starring the Royal Clerk Hugh Corbett and Brother Athelstan), P.C. Doherty provides another terrific entry in his homage to Chaucer. The story line provides a deep window into the late fourteenth century through the eyes of the travelers while the investigation looks into whether Beatrice died from an accident or a homicide is cleverly devised. Fans will enjoy the latest entry in this fine medieval mystery series with an apparent touch of the paranormal (see The Carpenter's Tale: THE HANGMAN'S HYMN).

Harriet Klausner
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Clerk of Oxford's Tale, November 11, 2006
Paul Doherty was born in Middlesbrough and is the consummate professional when it comes to writing historical mystery novels. I for one do not know how he can be so prolific with his offering of books and yet make sure that each of them is well researched. Whether they be 13th, 14th, or fifteenth century they are always true to the period. He also writes about Ancient Egypt and Alexander the Great.

A group of pilgrims have joined together, both for company and also for protection, as the roads and forests are littered with thieves and rogues, only too willing to relieve a traveller of their purse and most probably their lives as well. What adds even more spice to the journey is that several of the pilgrims know their fellow travellers but are not letting the fact become public knowledge.

The pilgrims have agreed that at the end of each day's journey when they stop at an inn or other resting place one of them will entertain the others with a tale. Whether the story is true or not only the storyteller will know.

The pilgrims have foolishly found themselves lost in a Kent forest, and night is falling. Also the forest is rumoured to be haunted. Huddled around a fire they have hastily made, they huddle close together and try to ignore the sounds of the forest that seem to be much louder in the darkness than they are during the day. The Clerk of Oxford agrees to tell a ghostly tale of love and death. A tale that makes even the knight with all his experience of battle and fighting shiver and tremble.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A ghost story and a love story, March 27, 2006
This book is tells the Clerk's Tale in his Pilgrim series. It's a really good ghost story as well as a poignant love story. Doherty uses his very descriptive writing skills to bring this all to life for the reader. There's lots here to keep a reader up at night - demons, devils, spirits and malevolant characters both alive and dead. Doherty has two story lines - the afterworld and real life, and both have haunting similaraties. Great stuff.
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A Haunt of Murder
A Haunt of Murder by P. C. Doherty (Hardcover - February 17, 2009)
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