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Edith Pargeter: The Confession of Brother Haluin (Brother Cadfael Mysteries) (AudiobookFormat, 1995, Chivers Audio Books) 5 stars

This is one of my favorite Cadfael books I've read so far. Unlike Summer of the Danes, the journey of Haluin and Cadfael is much more meaningful and interesting, propelling the plot as they go. Like a fable, Cadfael and Haluin blunder into what feels like another world, and discover secrets, mystery, and the miraculous. It's a keeper.

reviewed St. Peter's Fair by Edith Pargeter (Brother Cadfael (4))

Edith Pargeter: St. Peter's Fair (Paperback, 1998, Thorndike Press) 4 stars

This year’s (1139 CE) St. Peter’s Fair is a bother: the town wants a cut …

Peters' Peak, Perhaps

5 stars

Content warning Very Mild Plot Information

reviewed One Corpse too Many by Edith Pargeter (Chronicles of Brother Cadfael, #2)

Edith Pargeter: One Corpse too Many (Paperback, 1991, Time Warner Paperbacks) 4 stars

During the Anarchy, King Stephen takes Shrewsbury Castle and hangs 94 defenders. Brother Cadfael and …

A Strong Second Helping

4 stars

The second Cadfael novel iterates smartly on the first one, playing with points of view and obscuring the actual crime amongst a casual attrocity. The introduction of Hugh Beringar is a crucial addition to the series and his antagonistic debut solidly entertaining.

Edith Pargeter: The Summer of the Danes (1991) 2 stars

The Summer of the Danes is a medieval mystery novel by Ellis Peters, set in …

A Viking Snooze

2 stars

Content warning Plot Spoilers!

reviewed A Rare Benedictine by Edith Pargeter (Brother Cadfael (16))

Edith Pargeter, Ellis Peters: A Rare Benedictine (Paperback, 1991, Mysterious Press) 3 stars

These three short stories form a prequel to the Ellis Peters series featuring Brother Cadfael, …

A Brief Collection

3 stars

This short package of stories is mostly forgettable, with much of it reading like b-plots from other novels. The notable exception is the story that tells how Cadfael left his soldiering life and joined the Benedictine order. This one definitely delivers the best and most complete tale of the collection, and the peak at young(ish) Cadfael is exciting, he's strangely distant as a younger man, and keeps his thoughts hidden even from the reader. I'm still unsure if it's clever characterization, or just weirdly flat. Still, a fun little read.

Edith Pargeter: An excellent mystery (Hardcover, 1985, William Morrow and Co.) 2 stars

An Excellent Mystery is a mystery novel by Ellis Peters, the third of four set …

Absolutely Skip This One

1 star

Content warning Plot Spoilers and Bad Handling of Queer Characters

Becky Chambers: A Psalm for the Wild-Built (Hardcover, 2021, Tordotcom) 5 stars

It's been centuries since the robots of Panga gained self-awareness and laid down their tools; …

The Parable for the Great Resignation

5 stars

A short work delivered with wit, insight, and a hopeful vision of the future. Sibling Dex and Mosscap are characters that bounce off each other wonderfully, as the book peddles along at an easy clip.

If ever a work felt like a breath of fresh air, this is it.

Helen Macdonald: Vesper Flights (2020, Grove Press) 5 stars

About Everything

5 stars

Written by a naturalist and historian, the book is mostly about birds and, at the same time, about everything. With scientific rigor, the natural world and complexities or human existence are compared and evaluated.

Do not simply file this away as feel-good animal stories. Macdonald is clever, challenging, and posses a devastating brilliance that cuts through, well, everything.

Macdonald is also a brilliant writer. This work is just one jaw-dropping turn of phrase after another.

The final set of essays are the most personal and at times feel like the loosest, and least focused. But for all the profundity of the early essays, these are the ones the scrape through grime of the world to see something glittering underneath.

Do read this one.