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Fiction. Mystery. Historical Fiction. HTML: Sister Fidelma returns in another spellbinding story of murder and intrigue in seventh-century Ireland�when the murder of a high cleric threatens to result in a bloody war between two of Ireland's kingdoms. In A.D. 644, the Venerable Dacan, a respected scholar of the Celtic Church, is murdered while on a visit to the Abbey of Ros Ailithir in the Irish Kingdom of Muman. Dacan, unfortunately, was the close confidant of the hot-headed young king of the neighboring kingdom of Fearna, who is using Dacan's murder as an excuse to provoke war. Sister Fidelma, an advocate of the Brehon courts, is summoned by the dying King of Muman to solve the brutal killing and also to prevent the incipient war between the two kingdoms. But, at the remote abbey, Fidelma soon discovers that there are far more sinister forces than mere political intrigue at work behind the mystery of Dacan's death. She must quickly unravel a most complicated mystery if she is to prevent the coming war�and preserve her own life as well. With a mix of historical detail and deft characterization, Peter Tremayne once again brings ancient Ireland to full, vivid life..… (more)
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The scene is set in Ireland, where Fidelma’s brother , Colgú, designated heir of the kingdom of Muman whose king lays dying, has asked her to solve the mystery of the murder of a noted scholar, Dacan. Dacan was the brother of the archbishop of the
Fidelma has been summoned by her brother to solve the case before the hearing in front of the High King that will surely set off a war. She travels to the abbey to investigate in her official role as dálaigh or advocate of the courts. On her way, she and her warrior escort witness the brutal destruction of a village, which is burned to the ground and in which children have been slaughtered. They pick up a refugee sister who has three children with her, one a baby that dies before they can get to the abbey. The other are two boys who are reluctant to have much to do with Fidelma and her escort, or anyone in the abbey once they arrive.
The plot involves political intrigue around the succession to the throne of Osraige. There are plenty of twists, turns, and baffling developments in the case before Fidelma argues her case in the court of the High King.
The plot here is much improved over the first two books, and the writing marginally so. It’s still pretty mediocre when not downright bad. But the plot keeps the reader going. At least we don’t have a travesty of a Nero Wolfe ending where all the suspects are gathered together in one room to hear Nero Wolfe pronounce doom on one of them. This time, it’s a trial, and believe me, that truly improves the ending.
Better but not outstanding.
I haven't read any of the others, but this definitely worked as a stand-alone book. Fidelma, as an investigator with a good reputation, is asked to go to an abbey and investigate the murder
The book, I felt, does occasionally fall into the trap that so many historical mysteries do, of having the investigation proceed in very much the way that a modern criminal investigation would, rather than how it would have in the historical context. But still, Tremayne (Peter Berresford Ellis) is obviously quite knowledgable about Celtic history, and succeeds in creating an atmosphere redolent of ancient Ireland.
The mystery is complicated enough, and is muddled by more than one thread of motive by different parties. It is quite unpleasant at times, with children being murdered. I'm not sure it works as well now as it did when I read them initially, but that is probably me.