Browse by category
Assassin's Riddle by Paul T. Harding; Paul Doherty
Category: Fiction | Series: The\Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan Ser.
It's the summer of 1380 and the corpse of Edwin Chapler, clerk of the Office of the Green Wax of the Chancery, has been pulled from the Thames: Chapler has drowned, but not before he received a vicious blow to the back of the head. Then Bartholomew Drayton, a usurer and money-lender, is found dead in hi ...Show more
By Murder's Bright Light by Paul T. Harding; Paul Doherty
Category: Fiction | Series: The\Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan Ser.
It is the winter of 1379 and a sea of trouble is besetting England. French privateers attack the southern coast on a path to threaten London itself. In response an English flotilla of warships, with God's Bright Light in its number, has dropped anchor in the Thames. When the sun rises on their first mor ...Show more
House of Crows by Paul T. Harding; Paul Doherty
Category: Fiction | Series: The\Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan Ser.
In 1380, the King's parliament debates whether to grant money supplies to the Regent John of Gaunt for his war against the French. John orders Cranston to investigate the murders of the Shrewsbury representatives; the assassin must be caught before parliament suspects the Regent. Both Cranston and Broth ...Show more
The Devil's Domain by Paul Doherty
Category: Fiction | Series: The\Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan Ser.
In the summer of 1380 a French captain is murdered in Hawkmere Manor - a lonely, gloomy dwelling place, otherwise known as the 'Devil's Domain', which is used by Regent John of Gaunt to house French prisoners captured during the bloody battles waged between the French and the English on the Narrow Seas. ...Show more
The Nightingale Gallery - Being the First of the Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan by Paul T. Harding; Paul Doherty
Category: Fiction | Series: The\Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan Ser.
It is 1376, and the famed Black Prince has died of a terrible rotting sickness, closely followed by his father, King Edward III. The crown of England is now left in the hands of a mere boythe future Richard IIand the great nobles have gathered like hungry wolves around the empty throne. A terrible power ...Show more
1 - 5 of 5