Helpful Score: 1
Anyone interested in English medieval murder and mystery will enjoy this series of Hugh Corbett, master clerk and spy for King Edward III.
Written in the vein of his Brother Anselem series which really need to be read in sequence to follow the lives and years of their exploits.
All stories are different so makes for avid reading.
Written in the vein of his Brother Anselem series which really need to be read in sequence to follow the lives and years of their exploits.
All stories are different so makes for avid reading.
Thomas F. (hardtack) - , reviewed The Prince of Darkness (Hugh Corbett, Bk 5) on + 2719 more book reviews
A good story which I finished in one day. In this series Doherty doesn't spend annoying amounts of text telling us about the filthy conditions the lower classes of this time period lived in. Plus it offers several reasons why we should be glad we don't have royalty in our country, although some in Congress think they are. Finally, I'll never look at "Little People" in the same way again. In fact, from now on I'll give them a wide berth.
Anyone interested in English medieval murder and mystery will enjoy this series of Hugh Corbett, master clerk and spy for King Edward III.
Written in the vein of his Brother Anselem series which really need to be read in sequence to follow the lives and years of their exploits.
All stories are different so makes for avid reading.
Written in the vein of his Brother Anselem series which really need to be read in sequence to follow the lives and years of their exploits.
All stories are different so makes for avid reading.
Barbara R. (Crop4Fun) reviewed The Prince of Darkness (Hugh Corbett, Bk 5) on + 1217 more book reviews
Investigating the death of Lady Eleanor, who had been banished in the wake of her affair with the Prince of Wales, chief clerk Hugh Corbett struggles with the deceptive plot of a killer as the number of victims increases.