#BookReview Blood Runs Thicker by Sarah Hawkswood @AllisonandBusby

Blood Runs ThickerAbout the Book

August 1144. Osbern de Lench is known far and wide as a hard master, whose temper is perpetually frayed.

After his daily ride to survey his land, his horse returns to the hall riderless, and the lifeless body of the lord is found soon after. Was it the work of thieves, or something closer to home?

With an heir who is cast in the same hot-tempered mould, sworn enemies for neighbours and something amiss in the relationship between Osbern and his wife, undersheriff Hugh Bradecote, the wily Serjeant Catchpoll and apprentice Walkelin have suspects aplenty.

Format: Paperback (300 pages)       Publisher: Allison & Busby
Publication date: 18th March 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Sarah Hawkswood’s Bradecote and Catchpoll historical mystery series set in medieval Worcestershire has been around for some time but it’s one I only discovered recently when I read River of Sins, the seventh in the series. That made me keen to read more so I was delighted when I spotted this latest book, Blood Runs Thicker, on NetGalley and even more delighted when my request was approved by the lovely people at Allison & Busby.

Readers new to the series can be reassured that Blood Runs Thicker can definitely be enjoyed without having read any of the previous books, the occasional references to earlier events and the back stories of the leading characters, including some personal tragedies and longstanding enmities, being subtly introduced.

It was a pleasure to be reunited with Hugh Bradecote, Undersheriff of Worcestershire, and Serjeant Catchpoll. Also, enthusiastic young Walkelin, Catchpoll’s apprentice, ever eager to prove his abilities and showing early signs of a keen intelligence. Bradecote and Catchpoll make an effective team each contributing something different. Bradecote has the status to ensure they get access to those they need to speak to whilst Catchpoll possesses the detective nous and a rather intimidating gaze. Once again, they deploy their equivalent of a ‘good cop, bad cop’ strategy or perhaps more accurately ‘toff cop, common cop’. At one point, as they plan how to go about questioning the villagers of Lench, Catchpoll proposes, “Do you come the high and mighty and let me act the willing vessel into which they pours their remembering?” In fact, Catchpoll exhibits a touching pride in the signs of Bradecote’s developing investigative instincts. Observing Bradecote’s questioning of a suspect, ‘Catchpoll very nearly sighed with pleasure. This was just how serjeanting worked.’

In my review of River of Sins I noted that it had all the features of a police procedural but transported to medieval Worcestershire. The same is true of Blood Runs Thicker. Like their modern day counterparts, Bradecote and Catchpoll visit crime scenes in the search for clues and physical evidence, closely examine the body of the victim to establish the cause of death, interview witnesses and explore possible motives.

What they refuse to do is accept without question the accusation by Osbern’s son, Baldwin, now the new Lord of Lench, that his half-brother, Hamo, is responsible for their father’s death. Whilst Baldwin has inherited the short temper and high-handed nature of his father, Hamo is a gentler character albeit with a rather single-minded and literal way of thinking, often showing little emotion.  Today we would probably recognize Hamo as being on the autistic spectrum but it’s not surprising that the villagers of Lench find it strange and unsettling.

Bradecote and Catchpoll begin their search for suspects with the neighbouring lords of the manors, Raoul Parler and Walter Pipard, both of whom Osbern was widely known to have fallen out with. As Bradecote observes, “in dangerous times… petty rivalries hid beneath greater ones”. These greater ones include the constantly shifting loyalties of English nobles between Empress Maude and King Stephen, the warring rivals for the English throne.

As before, alongside what turns out to be a particularly complex mystery that had me a little baffled at some points, the author creates a vivid sense of what daily life for the inhabitants of an 11th century manor house and estate must have been like. Above all, the profound desire of everyone for a successful harvest to stave off hunger in the months to come. The latter is a concern Hugh Bradecote shares for his own estate. His wife, Christina, just wants Hugh back safely.

Blood Runs Thicker is another well-crafted historical mystery involving love, betrayal and family secrets. Fans of the series will be pleased to learn a further instalment is promised for later this year.

In three words: Intriguing, immersive, engaging

Try something similar: The Monastery Murders (Stanton and Barling #2) by E. M. Powell

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Sarah HawkswoodAbout the Author

Sarah Hawkswood describes herself as a ‘wordsmith’ who is only really happy when writing. She read Modern History at Oxford and her factual book on the Royal Marines in the First World War, From Trench and Turret, was published in 2006. The Bradecote and Catchpoll series are her first novels. She takes her pen name from one of her eighteenth century ancestors who lived in Worcestershire, and selected it because the initials match those of her maiden name. She is married, with two grown up children, and now lives in Worcestershire. She is a member of the Crime Writers’ Association, the Historical Writers’ Association, and the Historical Novel Society.(Photo/bio credit: Goodreads author page)

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#BookReview The Incendium Plot (Christopher Radcliff, #1) by A. D. Swanston @TransworldBooks

The Incendium PlotAbout the Book

England in 1572 is a powder keg of rumour, fanaticism, treachery and dissent. All it would take is a single spark…

In the England of Elizabeth I, the fear of plague and invasion, and the threat of insurrection are constant. As the Earl of Leicester’s chief intelligencer, lawyer Dr. Christopher Radcliff is tasked with investigating rumours of treachery at home and the papist threat from abroad. And with heresy and religious unrest simmering beneath the surface of a country on the brink, Radcliff is under pressure to get results.

Then two brutal and seemingly motiveless killings alert Radcliff to the whisper of a new plot against the queen. There are few clues, and all he and his network of agents have to go on is a single word: Incendium. But what does it mean – and who lies behind it? Christopher Radcliff must find out before it’s too late…

Format: Paperback (416 pages)     Publisher: Corgi
Publication date: 8th March 2018 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery, Crime

Find The Incendium Plot (Christopher Radcliff, #1) on Goodreads

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My Review

I’m too ashamed to check exactly how long The Incendium Plot has been sitting on my bookshelf since the author kindly sent me a review copy but I know for certain it’s way too long. However, I hope this and my previous enthusiastic review of another of his books, Beautiful Star & Other Stories, will help earn me his forgiveness.

The Incendium Plot is the first in a series of historical thrillers featuring academic, lawyer and “intelligencer”, Dr. Christopher Radcliff. It’s set during the same turbulent period of Elizabeth I’s reign that has proved such fertile ground for authors of historical crime mysteries such as C J Sansom and S J Parris.

The author occasionally tantalizes the reader with glimpses into Christopher’s back story, such as the circumstances which led to him becoming a ‘convicted felon’, the reason for his extreme reluctance to go anywhere near a prison, how his relationship with widow, Katherine Allington, came about, and why she continues to refuse his offer of marriage. These details make the book feel much less like a first instalment and more like an established series, but still one with lots of secrets about the characters to be revealed.

In his role as intelligencer to the Earl of Leicester, Christopher has gathered together a varied network of informers including a bookseller, a prostitute and a Jewish goldsmith.  However, it can be a risky business as some of them will find out. And life in the ‘the whispering world’ of the Elizabethan court seems to be no less hazardous with rivalry amongst advisors for preferment and the ear of the Queen. As the Earl warns Christopher, it is a ‘nest of vipers’. Although perhaps the vipers are lurking nearer the Earl than he might expect?

Dispatched to Paris on the orders of the Earl, Christopher arrives in time to witness the dreadful events of the St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre.  He is forced to make a breathless escape from Paris but not before he has encountered Sir Francis Walsingham, without an appearance by whom surely no Elizabethan historical mystery would be complete. (There is also a walk-on part for Sir Philip Sidney, brother of Mary Sidney, the leading character in Naomi Miller’s recent historical novel, Imperfect Alchemist.).

Christopher returns to a London fearful of a Spanish invasion and that the fires of hatred between Catholic and Protestants ignited in France will spread across the Channel to England. The memories of the dreadful scenes he witnessed in Paris will return to haunt him whenever he is confronted with cruelty or violence. Unfortunately for him, this becomes a regular occurrence as his investigations continue into the two killings and their possible connection with a  plot to overthrow the Queen.  Against his better judgment and in response to her determined questioning, Christopher finally confides in Katherine.  ‘There are bad things happening. Fires and plots and killing.  They must be stopped.’ But will he succeed?

The plot moves at a brisk pace with plenty of twists and turns.  Along the way, the author provides useful brief recaps in case, like Christopher himself, you’ve come to wonder just exactly what’s going on and how all the various threads will be woven together to reveal the full picture.

With its tightly-constructed plot and vivid period detail, The Incendium Plot will appeal to fans of historical mysteries looking for a new series to follow. A second book in the series, Chaos, was published in hardcover and ebook format in August 2020 and will be published in paperback on 1st July 2021.

In three words: Gripping, atmospheric, intriguing

Try something similar: Execution (Giordano Bruno #6) by S. J. Parris

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Andrew SwanstonAbout the Author

Andrew Swanston read Law at Cambridge but was inspired to write by his lifelong interest in early modern history. His Thomas Hill novels – The King’s Spy, The King’s Exile and The King’s Return – are set against the backdrop of the English Civil War, Cromwell’s Commonwealth and the early Restoration respectively. He is also author of Waterloo: The Bravest Man. Andrew lives in Surrey. (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

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