The Templar, the Queen and her lover

Michael Jecks

Book - 2007

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Jecks, Michael
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor MYSTERY/Jecks, Michael Checked In
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

British author Jecks displays an impressive command of period in his ponderous 24th Knights Templar mystery (after 2007's Dispensation of Death). In 1325, Sir Baldwin de Furnshill, a Knight Templar, and his friend Simon Puttock accompany Queen Isabella of England on a diplomatic mission to her brother, France's Charles IV. Soon after the queen and her entourage arrive in France, the Comte de Foix, "a powerful magnate," is found stabbed to death with Sir Baldwin's dagger. Accused of murder, Sir Baldwin must once again turn sleuth to clear his name--and save the queen's mission. A lengthy list of characters at book's start will be welcome to many readers, who may have trouble keeping them straight. A glossary of archaic words like "calefactory" and "tabor" is also useful. (Aug.) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

An honorable English knight confronts danger and deception on a mission to France. Sir Baldwin de Furnshill and his bailiff Simon Puttock have been ordered to join the escorts of Queen Isabella, sister of the French king and unhappy wife of Edward II, king of England. Edward is still carrying on a scandalous romance with greedy, vicious Sir Hugh le Despenser, whose hold on the king is ruining the country. Now that England has lost the land it held in France, Isabella's mission is to negotiate with her brother for its return. Even before the trip starts, several murders in London are used to blackmail a troupe of English musicians to join the queen's retinue in order to spy on her. Along the way a French count is killed and Baldwin is framed for the crime. Still more fatalities await in Paris. As Baldwin investigates, he senses the disparate murders are connected, but there is no one but Simon he can trust. Even the other members of his party have their own agendas, some as spies for Despenser and others for Roger Mortimer, a valiant English general, whose hatred for Despenser has cost him dearly. As usual in Jecks (The Malice of Unnatural Death, 2007, etc.), the meticulous period detail paints a compelling portrait of medieval life, this time with the bonus of a well-integrated mystery. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.