Deadliest Sin, The
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- €15.99
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- €15.99
Publisher Description
Crispin Guest is summoned to a London priory to unmask a merciless killer. Can he discover who is committing the deadliest of sins?
1399, London. A drink at the Boar’s Tusk takes an unexpected turn for Crispin Guest, Tracker of London, and his apprentice, Jack Tucker, when a messenger claims the prioress at St. Frideswide wants to hire him to investigate murders at the priory. Two of Prioress Drueta’s nuns have been killed in a way that signifies two of the Seven Deadly Sins, and she’s at her wits end.
Meanwhile, trouble is brewing outside of London when the exiled Henry Bolingbroke, the new Duke of Lancaster, returns to England’s shores with an army to take back his inheritance. Crispin is caught between solving the crimes at St. Frideswide’s Priory, and making a choice once more whether to stand with King Richard or commit treason again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
It's 1399 in Westerson's solid 15th and final medieval noir featuring disgraced English nobleman Crispin Guest (after 2020's Spiteful Bones), and Henry Bolingbroke, the exiled duke of Lancaster, poses a threat to the reign of Richard II. While Crispin, known as the Tracker for his reputation as a superior detective, waits to see what the conflict means for his future, Prioress Drueta, of London's St. Frideswide Priory, summons him after two of the nuns under her care are killed in bizarre ways. One had food stuffed down her throat, and the second was smothered by a pillow wrapped in all the blankets of her sister nuns. Crispin agrees to investigate and begins to question the priory's residents. When a third nun is found murdered with coins in her mouth, Crispin realizes that each murder illustrates one of the seven deadly sins. With access to part of the priory deemed off-limits because he's a man and an outsider, he recruits an old friend to go undercover as a nun. The intriguing politics behind the murders compensate for a solution that isn't one of the author's best. Westerson wraps up the series' major loose ends in a manner sure to satisfy fans.