Troubled Bones
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- $17.99
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
The Tracker encounters his old friend Geoffrey Chaucer while on a case for the Archbishop of Canterbury in this “murderous spin on The Canterbury Tales” (Kirkus Reviews).
Since losing his knighthood, Crispin Guest has crafted a new reputation for himself. From the shadowy corners of London to the halls of the royal court he is known as the Tracker, an investigator for hire who can find anyone or anything. But when the Archbishop of Canterbury hires him to expose the culprit threatening the sacred relics of a holy martyr, Crispin finds himself a stranger in an unfamiliar land.
Within a city of pilgrims and priests, he unexpectedly encounters his former friend Geoffrey Chaucer, poet, rabble-rouser, and liege to Crispin’s former master. Chaucer and his group of fellow pilgrims all have tales to tell . . . and secrets to hide. And when murder befalls the cathedral, Crispin is enlisted in a second case. Among hallowed tombs of soldiers and saints, in a world of ancient secrets and undying vendettas, Crispin must identify the murderous heretic among holy men if he has any hope of returning home.
Reimagining the world of The Canterbury Tales in an engaging, suspenseful mystery, Troubled Bones was nominated for the Macavity, the Agatha, Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice, and the Bruce Alexander Historical Mystery awards.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Set in 1385, Westerson's fine fourth historical featuring disgraced knight Crispin Guest (after 2010's The Demon's Parchment) takes Crispin (aka "the Tracker") to Canterbury, where he's greeted by his old friend Geoffrey Chaucer and where Lollard heretics have been making threats against the bones of Thomas Becket, on display in the cathedral. The archbishop of Canterbury wants Crispin to both safeguard the sacred relics and identify the Lollards' agent, who's posing as a monk. When someone slays prioress Eglantine de Mooreville, one of several pilgrims visiting the town, with a sword in the cathedral, the archbishop insists the crime's an ecclesiastical matter, not the king's business, and orders the Tracker to find the culprit. The Agatha Christie like solution will please puzzle buffs, while series fans will welcome the author's efforts to further flesh out the lead and his apprentice, Jack Tucker.