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The Proud Sinner

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

2018 Lefty Award nominee for Best Historical Mystery Novel

In the winter of 1282, snow and ice ravage East Anglia while Prioress Eleanor awaits the decision of her young maid, Gracia, found starving on the streets some years ago, whether to take vows or to leave Tyndal Priory to make her way in the world.

But a far greater problem arrives at the priory gate. Seven abbots are riding to meet a papal legate in Norfolk. This is not a pilgrimage—each abbot hopes to make a case for being raised to a bishopric at the next vacancy. One abbot grows so ill the party has detoured to Tyndal. And despite the limited care Sister Anne can offer, Abbot Ilbert dies a horrible death, cause unknown. As his fellows prepare to resume their journey the next day, Abbot Tristram doubles over in great distress. By now the heavy snows have choked all the roads and the priory and village are marooned. Tristram dies. And then another abbot sickens while Sister Anne struggles to determine what killed these men—which question soon becomes not just what, but who did it?

One suspect is the gluttonous Odo, the ambitious Abbot of Caldwell and younger brother of Crowner Ralf. Since everyone despises Odo, is he simply a red herring? Prioress Eleanor is determined to stop the carnage that has shattered the tranquility in her priory while the Crowner must enforce the king's justice. Brother Thomas and Sister Anne form part of the investigation which plumbs the priory's kitchens and management as well as its medical facilities.

The Proud Sinner, 13th in the Medieval Mysteries by Priscilla Royal, illustrates medieval matters medical and culinary as well as vocations for the religious life in a framework that crosses Chaucer's Canterbury Tales with Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 5, 2016
      At the start of Royal’s taut 13th mystery set in 13th-century England (after 2016’s Land of Shadows), a party of seven abbots arrives at Tyndal Priory. One of them, Abbot Ilbert, is seriously ill. Despite the ministrations of Sister Anne, a trained healer, Ilbert perishes, as do more than one of his colleagues soon after. Suspicion that food served at the priory might be responsible for the deaths places pressure on Prioress Eleanor to identify the culprit and exonerate her community. Ilbert had a reputation as a sadistic martinet, who once beat a clerk nearly to death for having spilled ink on a piece of parchment, but Eleanor also considers that Ilbert’s prospects for advancement within the church may have motivated his killer. Atypically, Royal gives scant attention to developing the historical background, but her clever integration of an Agatha Christie–like plot into her chosen period will still please whodunit fans.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2016
      A medieval prioress with a talent for solving murders suddenly has far too many for comfort.Prioress Eleanor of Tyndal Priory must play reluctant host to seven scheming abbots and their servants. Abbot Ilbert, arriving extremely ill, dies before talented Sister Anne can help him, and although Abbot Tristram seems to recover for a while, he too passes away. After a heavy snowfall prevents them from traveling on to meet with a papal envoy, the remaining abbots, ensconced in the new guest quarters and served the best food the priory can provide, carp and whine as they wait for the roads to reopen. Despite their protestations of holiness, each selfishly hopes to advance his own position in the church hierarchy. Odo, the Abbot of Caldwell, the obese brother of Eleanor's friend Crowner Ralf, is obsessed with food, while abbots Gifre, Mordredus, Didier, and Ancell mask their concerns and ambitions behind polite facades. Sister Anne redoubles her efforts to discover the cause of Ilbert's death when Odo becomes ill and Abbott Gifre dies after eating mushroom tart. Going off to question the people at the inn the party stayed at the night before the first illness, Ralf hears of a mysterious servant belonging neither to the inn or the abbots who helped serve them. Both Ralf and Eleanor's right hand, Brother Thomas, now must search in Tyndal village for the man they believe the snowstorm may have forced to stay there. Though several of the abbots must have been poisoned, the poisons may have been quite different. If any of them are to survive, Eleanor must put her fine mind to work to discover the killer. Royal's 13th medieval murder (Land of Shadows, 2016, etc.) takes a page from The Mousetrap, forcing the detective to think outside the box imprisoning her and her suspects.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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