Tangled Web UK Review February 2004
File Updated: 03/12/04

Buy at Amazon Price The Gleemaiden The Gleemaiden by Sylvian Hamilton
pbk out March 05 (Review) at £7.99

This is the third of Sylvian Hamilton's tales of Sir Richard Straccan and I hope that there will be another thirty! She is a delightful writer - witty, colourful and exciting - and her books cry out to be read at a single sitting. The time is the reign of bad King John and her hero is Straccan, a former Crusader whose current profession is the acquisition of holy relics for sale to religious houses. He has a daughter Gilla and a fiancé Janiva, both of whom have the gift of second sight, for the author adds a little magic here and there to good effect.
The plot is many-stranded, but these all come together very satisfactorily. In a previous story, Straccan killed a man in Sanctuary, but he cannot get absolved from this sin because England is under the Pope's interdict and the church is paralysed. He strikes a bargain with the Bishop of Winchester, in which he will be absolved if he oversees the transport of a huge bell from London to Durham - a journey of many weeks which turns out to be a nightmare series of accidents and incidents.
Interwoven with this task is a spin-off of the Cathar heresy in southern France, cruelly crushed by the Bishop of Toulouse and Simon de Montfort. A kinsman of one of Straccan's ex-Templar friends is a small boy, David, who is rescued from France by Miles, another of Straccan's friends, along with Roslyn, a gleemaiden who gives the book its title. However, the dastardly Bishop of Toulouse sends three killers after David to destroy him, for reasons I will not divulge in a review - but which I used myself in one of my own Crowner John books.
Along with a baron's plot to kill the king when he goes to war with Llewelyn of Wales (who is married to Joan, the king's bastard daughter), the Queen's champion abducts her to have his way with her, and she is rescued from a lonely castle in the fens. With assorted monks, priests, spies, assassins, gleemen, beggars and Templars (not to mention the dog), the story is by turns funny, cruel, mysterious, informative and exciting. As in the previous book I reviewed, the author puts modern idioms and slang into the mouths of her early thirteenth century characters, but the result is not incongruous and often hilarious.
Sylvian Hamilton is rapidly becoming my favourite writer and I hope she already has another Straccan on the stocks for me.


( Bernard Knight ex Home Office Pathologist and author of the highly acclaimed Crowner John series)

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