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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enchanting!, July 29, 2000
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This review is from: Ravens of Blackwater (Mass Market Paperback)
Knowing nothing about The Domesday mysteries, or Edward Marston, I purchased this because of my fascination with the time period and my interest in murder mysteries. This satisfied both. Not only is it a very good mystery in its own right, but Marston does an excellent job of portraying the period. I would recommend this to any mystery lover. You will find the setting to be enchanting!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Mystery, May 26, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Ravens of Blackwater (Mass Market Paperback)
The Ravens of Blackwater is the second entry of Edward Marston's Domesday Books. Marston has a good sense of his period and focuses on the tensions between Saxons and Normans that dominated the time of William the Conqueror. He also has a well-researched feel for medieval legalities, church practice, and the blood-thirstiness underlying social relationships. All these qualities come together in a good mystery with a suspenseful ending.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The story kept me involved from first page to last., September 1, 2009
First Sentence: Blackwater Hall seemed to hover like a bird of prey over the river estuary whose name it held in its eager talons.

Norman-born soldier Sir Ralph Delchaird and Briton/Saxon lawyer, Gervase Bret, along with two clerics, travel to the Esex town of Maldon to investigate possible land-transfer irregularities for King William and the Domesday Book. The eldest son of FitzCorbucion of Blackwood Hall, the family suspected of illegal dealings, has been murdered. His younger brother is certain of the murderer; Delchaird and a married priest in the town, are less convinced.

The first thing I appreciated about this about this book, and the series, is that each incident is based an actual entry in the Domesday Book.

The difference between the two men's backgrounds, both in origin and experience, gives good contrast and makes them a great team. The book has delightful humor which offsets the occasional violence and darkness of the period.

Marston conveys the period well; he certainly doesn't pretty it up at all. In fact, to me, the sign of an author who has done his research and whose books are historically accurate is when you read books by other authors set in the same period and all their facts mesh.

The story is well done and kept involved from the first page to the very last. I highly recommend it for any who loves history, mysteries, and/or both.

THE RAVENS OF BLACKWATER (Hist. Mys-Ralph Delchard/Gervase Bret-England-1000s) - VG
Marston, Edward - 2nd in series
St. Martin's Press, 1994, US Hardcover - ISBN: 0312113307

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4.0 out of 5 stars interesting, December 19, 2011
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Paints a vivid picture of the late 12 century. Adventures and murder around the census for the Domesday Book of William the Conquerer. The plot is intriguing and the solution well hidden, yet entirely logical. I look forward to reading the series.
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Ravens of Blackwater
Ravens of Blackwater by Edward Marston (Mass Market Paperback - March 2, 1996)
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