Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Compelling and Touching Mystery, July 12, 1999
This is the first Brother Cadfael I have been talked into reading, and I loved it. The characters are compelling and touching and the perpetrator of the crime is understood by the Benedictine monks, and, thus, the reader. It's the mystery that sucks you in, but it's the character development and the way the author tells of Medieval life that are the value here, I think. At the end, I teared up a bit. I'm anxious to read more about Brother Cadfael and his colleagues!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Troubling Matter, November 1, 2010
I have read all the books in the Cadfael series, and enjoy the gentle manner of most of the characters. Ms. Peters' historical setting is intriguing, although she represents the medieval world as seen through rose-colored glasses. Yes, there is sex, violence, and other villanies, but there are no lurid details, and this is refreshing to my palate.
But there is one matter in this book which really troubles me. I cannot accept that Brother Ruald, after making matrimonial vows to his wife, Generys, can simply walk away from those vows to make another vow as a monk. From a very human point of view, he abandons a blameless woman who has been faithful and loving, in order to fulfill his OWN desires to be a monk. How selfish! Does the call to a religious vocation absolve one from vows previously taken and from responsibilities freely accepted in the world? Ruald's abandonment of his wife seems to me a great sin and the fact that he later repents of his treatment of her is not satisfying.
Perhaps not a flaw in Peters' writing, plotting, and historical research, but troubling nevertheless.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Buried memories, May 12, 2006
In this 17th chronicle of the detective monk, Brother Cadfael is asked to help to identify the body of a woman who was discovered when the monks of the Abbey of St.Peter and St.Paul began to till a field which had just been donated to them. The field was previously occupied by Ruald, a local potter who abandoned his wife of many years to become a monk, claiming that he had a divine calling from God, and the fact that he was leaving his wife neither free nor widowed, was immaterial. Local rumour has it that Ruald's wife, Generys, ran off with a lover and, as she was a very beautiful woman who certainly did not appreciate being dumped, even for God, this rumour was generally accepted. It's the year 1143 and the civil war between King Stephen and the Empress Maud is still raging, with the armies of both sides doing great damage to the countryside and the people. When an Abbey in the fens was seized by renegade soldiers under Geoffrey de Mandeville, the monks were forced to flee to safety and one of them, a young man who was still a novice, comes to Shrewsbury. Sulien Blount is the younger son of a local noble family and begs admission to the Abbey to continue his novitiate. Sulien has a ring belonging to Generys and claims that he obtained it recently from a silversmith near the besieged Abby, which proves that she is still alive and so the body which was found cannot be hers. When the Sheriff, Hugh Beringar is commanded by the king to take a troop of soldiers to the fens to flush out the marauders, he takes the opportunity to visit the silversmith to find out the truth about Generys ring. Between them, Cadfael and Hugh discover the truth behind the body which was buried in unconsecrated ground...an unbelievably shocking thing in those times.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|