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The Sanctity of Hate
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The Sanctity of Hate
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The Sanctity of Hate
Ebook313 pages4 hours

The Sanctity of Hate

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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A MEDIEVAL MYSTERY: On a remote East Anglian coast stands Tyndal Priory, home to a rare monastic order where men and women live and work together in close proximity. Twenty-year-old Eleanor of Wynethorpe has been appointed prioress by Henry III over the elected choice of the priory itself. Young and inexperienced, Eleanor will face a grave struggle – in a place dedicated to love and peace, she will find little of either.

SANCTITY OF HATE: Summer, 1276: Tyndal Priory is peaceful – or was until the corpse of a deceitful and unpopular man is found floating in the millpond. The list of suspects is long, but the villagers of Tyndal are certain they know who the killer is. They demand that a Jew made homeless by King Edward's Statute of the Jewry is hanged for the crime. While the lynch mob gathers, Prioress Eleanor has to ask herself why are they so keen to convict a stranger – a refugee only stopped in the village while his wife gives birth – for the murder of a man none of them could stand?

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHead of Zeus
Release dateJun 1, 2013
ISBN9781781856215
Unavailable
The Sanctity of Hate
Author

Priscilla Royal

Priscilla Royal was born in Seattle, grew up in British Columbia and now lives in Northern California. She has a degree in world literature from San Francisco State University and is the author of nine books in the Medieval Mysteries series.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In Priscilla Royal’s ninth Prioress Eleanor mystery, The Sanctity of Hate, it is the summer of 1276 and the peace of Tyndal Priory has been disturbed by the discovery of a corpse in the millpond. Suspicion falls on a family of Jewish refugees and it is up to Prioress Eleanor to discover the murderer before the once tranquil village erupts into violence.The greatest strength of Royal’s medieval mystery novels has always been her attention to historical detail and her latest book lives up to that tradition. Unlike many historical writers, Royal does not dump a mountain of facts on her readers in an effort to show off how much research she has done; instead, she subtly incorporates details of medieval life into the narrative, leaving the reader with a feel for the period without overburdening them with extraneous information.This skill for historical situations truly shines in The Sanctity of Hate in the interactions between the Christian inhabitants of Tyndal and the Jewish refugees. Royal’s characters do not fall into the evil Christian/persecuted Jew stereotype that plagues so many historical novels. Nor does she give her characters 21st century sensibilities. She creates characters that are complex and compassionate, but still display the beliefs that are appropriate to the period.On the negative side, the book’s central mystery isn’t as well developed as it could be. The investigation sometimes feels like it is intruding on the characters’ interactions and the murderer’s identity and motive are not very difficult to deduce. Luckily, it’s easy to get swept up in the rest of the story and overlook this minor flaw.Received via NetGalley. Originally written for The Tiger Print. I am the author of the review and it is reprinted with permission.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    As I come to this series with the ninth novel,I was somewhat at sea for some time. What we have is another in the endless number of Medieval Mysteries set within a religious community. There are to be frank,many better ones about. Mainly about anti-Semitism among the populous of the time. One or two murders of a not very interesting type and a lot of semi-religious spouting.Not over impressed with this one.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Priscilla Royal has brought her fine historical and story-telling skills to a heartbreaking and complex period in medieval England: the treatment of Jews under Edward I. What I love best about Royal’s mysteries is their ability to hold me in captivated enjoyment while encompassing a subtle and nuanced historical world. She never simplifies the issues and ideas we can glean from the period, but your reading never feels burdened by this sophistication and depth. Lord knows, the persecution of Jews in Edward’s England could get dreary in the hands of a lesser writer. Or it could get preachy or utterly anachronistic with characters spouting modern tolerant views to assuage the author’s discomfort at presenting such a shameful moment in time. Royal avoids these pitfalls. Over the course of this series Royal has developed two profoundly admirable human beings in Prioress Eleanor and Brother Thomas. Both are flawed and wracked with doubts, which makes them all the more likeable and their failures forgivable. Since we trust these two to act from justice and kindness in the long run, when they choose to stand up for and protect a Jewish family at risk of mob violence, we do not find this surprising. And lest we fear modern sensibilities have slipped in, even these most compassionate characters express a fervent desire for the conversion of these Jews as the ultimate best thing for them. That’s as far as the good medieval Christian heart can go and Royal recognizes that it is a kindness in its time, however harsh it may feel to most modern minds. Thomas, with his inner doubts about God and his innate outsider status as a man drawn to love other men at a time when that was viewed as a sin, comes close at times to recognizing that his and Eleanor’s goodwill is too conditional and circumscribed, but he never voices those doubts aloud. On one level there’s the excitement of sorting out who is murdering people in Tyndal and the intense project of keeping safe this Jewish family while investigating them as the most popular nominees for suspects. The reader also savors a completely unconventional love tale which will have you biting nails, wanting to slap both the man and the woman involved for their foolishness and somehow liking them immensely at the same time. Isn’t that how real people are? Oh, and if lately you’ve been thinking about the limitations of faith, the beauty of bee-keeping and the natural world, the violence of controlling parenting, or, of course, the sanctity of hate, you’ll find plenty to ponder in this book while enjoying yourself.