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Devil's Novice | 
enlarge | Author: Ellis Peters Creator: Sir Derek Jacobi Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton Audio Books Category: Book
List Price: £9.99 Buy Used: £4.40 You Save: £5.59 (56%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 439029
Format: Audiobook Media: Audio Cassette Edition: Abridged Ed Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 5.3 x 4.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 1840323221 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781840323221 ASIN: 1840323221
Publication Date: July 6, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Fast dispatch from UK seller
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A noble family loses a priest and gains a monk June 21, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"They say there's a devil at him in his sleep, and it was he brought it here among them, and who knows which of them it will prey on next? The devil's novice, I've heard him called. Oh, I put a stop to that, at least aloud. But it's what they're thinking." - Brother Paul, master of novices
"The devil is always the intruder, the stranger, the one who is different. Every successive wave of newcomers from the mainland of Europe, either from the north or the east, was the very devil in its day." - from SHROPSHIRE: A MEMOIR OF THE ENGLISH COUNTRYSIDE
While Abbot Radulfus questions the wisdom of accepting novices too young to know what they're giving up, he has no objection to a young man past nineteen entering the cloister of his own free will. Meriet Aspley, younger son of the Norman lord of Aspley, seems like a straightforward proposition: a younger son, perhaps seeking a career rather than a vocation, but surely none the worse for that as long as he strives to be a credit to the order. But Brother Paul, for one, is uneasy about him, having never before seen a postulant pursue his vows with such determination but so little joy.
By day, Meriet is all dutiful obedience, studying hard and petitioning to have his probationary term shortened, but by night he wakes the entire monastic household with violent nightmares. He's never served in the armies of either king or empress and seen little of violence save on the hunt, yet the mere sight of a fellow novice struck unconscious by a freak accident sends him into shaken silence. On the other hand, a run-in with Brother Jerome over a keepsake from a red-haired girl suggests other kinds of passion running in Meriet: not only a thwarted love for his elder brother's betrothed, but a hot temper when he tries to defend his trophy from Jerome.
Meanwhile Hugh Beringar pursues the disappearance of another cleric connected with the Aspley household: Peter Clemence, envoy from the Bishop of Winchester to the great lords of Chester and Lincoln and cousin to Meriet, last seen spending the night at Aspley on his way north. Why should a priest disappear at the same time the youngest son of the household was seized with a sudden urge to enter the cloister?
Very tidy mystery here, particularly since Meriet is given to speaking the literal truth under interrogation, so the reader has a certain amount of evidence to work with.
Particularly nice touches: - Meriet attempting to strangle Brother Jerome. - The three most formidable members of the Aspley household: Meriet, his father Leoric, and his father's ward Isouda, who's confident that he will be hers in the end. - How Brother Mark gains a patron for his studies to enter the priesthood (after this book, he doesn't return until SUMMER OF THE DANES). - Radulfus' consultations with various senior brothers on the issue of accepting children into the order. - Character development of Brother Paul, the master of novices.
As always, I recommend the unabridged recording narrated by Stephen Thorne.
More of a whydunnit than a whodunnit July 10, 2002 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
The big mystery throughout this eighth of Ellis Peters' Chronicles of Brother Cadfael is not really who, in the depths of the Salop countryside one day in the late summer of the year of Our Lord 1140, committed murder most foul upon the person of Peter Clemence, cleric to Bishop Henry of Bois - but why! And also just what the connection might be between the unfortunate demise of a harmless cleric - seemingly not even relieved of his valuables - and the latest candidate to be accepted into the noviciate of Shrewsbury's abbey of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, the nineteen-year-old, Meriet Aspley. For it is obvious, from the very opening of this book, to both reader and Brother Cadfael alike, that there is some dark secret haunting the latest entrant to the abbey. There is also little doubt that the sad fate of Peter Clemence has some bearing upon it. Equally obvious is that the mediaeval sleuth will need to have not only his wits but also all of his tact about him too, if he is to winkle out the truth behind matters here, both of the circumstances of the cleric's death and of young Meriet Aspley's sudden-found yearning for life within the cloister.In her usual manner, Ellis Peters drip-feeds her hero and her readers alike with tantalising but measured trickles of information, permitting both to proceed but piecemeal (and at about the same pace as each other) towards the final revelation and the story's sudden resolution. Along the way, we are treated to the author's characteristically over-glamorised view of Mediaeval English life, with her entirely comforting (and rather touching) view of the honest goodness of the (Saxon) poor, as well as the essentially corrupt nature of those who would aspire to power (usually those overbearing Normans, of course). In common with others of this series, this book presents a mix of romance and murder mystery, all set against a back-drop of political intrigue. In essence, then, we have here another classic from the Cadfael mould - an engaging read that taxes neither imagination nor credulity over much and which provides some fascinating glimpses of how things might have been in twelfth century Salop. It can be recommended to both established Cadfael fans and newcomers alike.
An old but always great story - Abel and Cain January 22, 2002 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Ellis Peters brings us an old but always compelling and emotional story - two brothers, one well loved, the other one not so well. The emotions reflected in this book are so deep that it can move you to tears and, at the same time, the suspense about the murder and which of the two brothers did it is and mounting throughout the book. Time is crucial and we are given all the clues but in the end we just want the devil's novice to return to his home, father and choose rightly between two women, one of them his brother's bride. This book has everything but love between father and son, between brothers, between man and woman is the point and makes it a thrilling read.
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