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Paperback The Saint John's Fern (A Roger the Chapman Medieval Mystery) Book

ISBN: 074726810X

ISBN13: 9780747268109

The Saint John's Fern (A Roger the Chapman Medieval Mystery)

(Book #9 in the Roger the Chapman Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$7.09
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Book Overview

It is October 1477 and Roger the Chapman, newly married and still enjoying wedded bliss, is surprised to find his old, familiar feeling of restlessness returning. Within a month he is setting off,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Roger the Chapman is back in fine fettle!

It's murder most foul. And Roger the Chapman, Kate Sedley's ubiquitous pedlarcum sleuth, finds himself deeply involved in a most perplexing case. Master Capstick, an aging but wealthy man, is found brutally murdered and hisgreat-nephew, who'd just been cut out of the will, has been charged with the homicide. Alas, the nephew, young Beric, has disappeared! Locals are quick to point out that he haseaten of the Saint John's fern, which makes a person invisible at will! Thus, for half a year the chase has been on and no one is able to locate Beric.But, of course, along trods Roger and before a day's wages can be made, he's completelyinvolved in this mystery. It's 1477 and the war of the Roses is heating up. Author Sedley neatly weaves inthis historical setting to enhance the suspense that her plot has generated. In this, theninth installment of the Roger the Chapman series, Sedley is in fine form, perhaps with themost exciting of all the episodes. "Saint John's Fern" is a quick and absorbing read, as thebook deftly dabbles with issues that are time-worn and time-laden. Sedley never misses abeat! ...

a chilling and haunting tale

For me, "The Saint John's Fern" turned out to be one of better Roger the Chapman mystery novels. The atmosphere was chilling and haunting and the murder mystery a gripping and intriguing one. However, I will own that I'm biased as Kate Sedley's Roger the Chapman mystery series is one of my all time favourites, and is always an auto-buy for me (I actually fork out for the expensive British Hardcovers).Newly married to Adela (his first wife's cousin) and basking in the glow of his newly merged family (that includes Adela's young son, his own daughter, and his mother-in-law from his first marriage), one would think that Roger the Chapman would be content never to leave his new home at Lewin's Mead in Bristol. However it isn't too long before Roger feels the pull to travel (much to his mother-in-law's disappointment and chagrin). Fortunately for Roger, Adela understands her husband completely, and refuses to stand in his way. For Roger has one talent: the ability to solve knotty problems (i.e. apparently unsolvable murders). And Roger (who happens to be an ex-Benedictine novitiate) feels strongly that it is God who directs him to travel to wherever there is a wrong that needs to be put right, or a murderer brought to justice. And this time God (and his feet) sends him to Plymouth, where happenstance takes him to Bilbury Street, where Roger learns a particularly vicious murder took place a few months ago.Five months ago, retired and wealthy fisherman, Oliver Capstick was brutally bludgeoned to death (while he slept) by his young grandnephew, Beric Gifford. Beric (and his older sister Berenice) happen to be Master Capstick's only surviving relatives, as well as his heirs. But they are also quite poor and quite dependent on the old man. And when Master Capstick tries to arrange a match for Beric with a glassmaking heiress, all hell breaks loose. For Beric happens to be in love with his sister's lady's maid, Katherine Glover, and he refuses to countenance the match his granduncle is proposing. The two have an angry and ugly falling out, with Master Capstick threatening to make Berenice his sole heir. And on the morning following this altercation, it is alleged that Beric rode over to his uncle's house and beat him to death while he slept. That Beric is guilty of the crime is not the issue -- far too many people saw him leaving the house mere minutes before the hue and cry was raised. No, the chilling bit deals with the posse's inability to apprehend Beric, and his quick disappearance from the scene of the crime. Many people believe that Beric ate an herb known as Saint John's Fern, and herb that is able (or so people claim) to render the consumer invisible. Roger, however refuses to believe in this supernatural explanation, and is sure that there is a logical explanation as to why Beric has not been found yet. And confident that that is the reason why he is in Plymouth, Roger begins his investigation, gently questioning witnesses, trying to figure out wh

strong fifteenth century who-done-it

In 1477 Roger the Chapman has enjoyed his second marriage for four months, especially the birth of his second child. However, Roger still feels restless as he senses that he is needed in Plymouth. He hitches a ride with Peter Threadgold who is traveling to see his daughter Joanna.Roger learns from Joanna that someone viciously beat her neighbor Master Capstick to death with witnesses having seen the victim's great-nephew leaving the scene of the crime. However, when the King's men came to arrest Beric, he had vanished with many locals superstitiously believing that witchcraft through the application of THE SAINT JOHN'S FERN was used to make Beric invisible. Roger begins to investigate and that leads to attempts on his life and the insinuation that he was involved in a second homicide.Perhaps this time Roger will appreciate home sweet home as his latest adventure turns quite personal and readers must accept his latest wanderlust. Though the mystery elements are cleverly written and nicely tied together in the climax, the story line belongs to graphic perusal of fifteenth century life in England. Roger remains a strong detective, but it is the historical elements that make Kate Sedley's latest who-done-it a winner for series fans and those readers who relish a resplendent look at medieval times.Harriet Klausner
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