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Season of Blood

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A missing Holy Relic. A mysterious and beautiful woman. Two murdered monks: Crispin Guest tackles his most intriguing investigation to date.
1390. Hailes Abbey, Gloucestershire, England. Two monks lie murdered, their Holy Blood relic stolen: a relic that is said to run liquid for the sinless and remain stubbornly dry for the sinner. Unwilling to become involved in a bitter dispute between a country monastery and Westminster Abbey, the disgraced former knight Crispin Guest attempts to return the relic to Hailes where it belongs, but somehow it keeps returning to his hands no matter what.
As he tries to shield a former nemesis from a charge of murder while becoming entangled with a mysterious and beautiful woman caught between Church politics and the dangerous intrigues of King Richard's court, Crispin begins to suspect that someone at Westminster is conspiring with the assassins. Can the Blood of Christ point to the killer?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 14, 2015
      An unlikely supporting character takes a prominent role, at the expense of credibility, in Westerson’s eighth Crispin Guest mystery (after 2014’s Cup of Blood). In 1388, an explosion inside London’s Westminster Abbey disrupts the Feast of the Holy Virgin’s Nativity, whose attendees include Richard II; Guest, who’s known as the Tracker for his investigative prowess; and Guest’s 15-year-old apprentice, Jack Tucker. No one is injured, but when the smoke clears, the Stone of Destiny, which was captured a century earlier from the Scots and stored underneath Edward I’s coronation chair, is gone. The king, who fears that he’ll appear weak if he goes before Parliament without the stone restored to the chair, gives Guest three days to retrieve it. Since Richard has his doubts about Guest’s loyalty, he holds Jack hostage to ensure the Tracker does his bidding. During the apprentice’s
      captivity, Jack manages to gain a powerful ally in a subplot that relies too much on contrivance. Despite the high stakes, Westerson fails to generate much suspense. Agent: Joshua Bilmes, Jabberwocky Literary Agency.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2016
      In the latest installment in her historical mystery series (Cup of Blood, 2014), Westerson catches up with disgraced knight Crispin Guest, who is eking out a living as the Tracker while his past deeds and decisions continue to weigh heavily upon his conscience. Accompanying his young apprentice, former thief Jack Tucker, to Westminster Abbey to witness a feast day celebration, Crispin risks being seen by Richard II, the very monarch he was accused of betraying. When a mysterious explosion rocks the church, it is discovered that the Stone of Destiny, an important symbol of England's dominion over Scotland, has been stolen. Reeling from the rebellions of his own barons, Richard II gives Crispin three days to recover the stone, imprisoning Jack as an added incentive. As Crispin wends his way through the grimy streets and alleys of fourteenth-century London, chasing suspect Scots, Jack assists the queen in solving a perplexing mystery of her own. Westerson continues to conjure up a suitably noirish setting as the backdrop for the exploits of her spiritually tortured medieval detective.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2017
      The latest Crispin Guest medieval mystery is set at the end of the fourteenth century. Guest, a former knight who's now the medieval version of a private investigator, is hired to find out whether a young woman's disappearance is the result of foul playshe was being pursued by an unsuitable man, says the girl's auntor whether she's simply off having some fun. When Guest finds out who the unsuitable man is (a former lord sheriff of London and a rather despicable fellow), he's pretty sure that the girl's disappearance is a very bad thing. When a monk is murdered right in front of Guest, and the girl's aunt vanishes into thin air, he determines to figure out who's behind the dastardly goings-on. Series fans will be on familiar ground, and, because the author makes sure to provide some background on Crispin Guest, newcomers can jump right in.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2017
      At the start of Westerson’s solid 10th medieval mystery (after 2016’s A Maiden Weeping), Crispin Guest, a former knight who now investigates crimes for six pence a day, notices he’s being followed one cold March night through the narrow lanes of London. Crispin manages to waylay his pursuer, who turns out to be a beautiful young woman seeking his services. They withdraw to a small house Crispin has a key to, where the woman asks him to find her niece, who has fallen into the clutches of Simon Winchcombe, a vile seducer who just happens to be Crispin’s nemesis. Before Crispin can learn the woman’s name, there’s a knock at the door. He opens it and has to quickly sidestep the falling body of a Cistercian monk with a dagger in his back. The unknown woman disappears, but that doesn’t stop Crispin, who has a strong sense of justice, from trying to help her niece—and going after the monk’s killer. Fans of 20th-century noir will relate to Crispin, who doesn’t say no to a drink and is a sucker for damsels in distress. Agent: Joshua Bilmes, JABberwocky Literary.

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