miss_adventure: (wild things read)
miss_adventure ([personal profile] miss_adventure) wrote2012-01-04 11:30 pm
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[book reviews] Tudor-era Hunchback Lawyers

Over the past week, I read all five of C.J. Sansom's Matthew Shardlake series. I cannot recommend them highly enough to fans of historical mysteries. Set in the England of King Henry VIII, they are told from the wry yet sensitive point of view of Matthew Shardlake, a barrister of Lincoln's Inn who attempts to see justice done in the corrupt courts of law and the even more corrupt courts of royalty. The author is a retired solicitor with a PhD in history, and it shows--he has clearly done impeccable research and one need not have a background in the Reformation to understand what is going on, so seamlessly is that information integrated into the text, and Sansom ends each book with a historical note and recommendations for further reading. Yet these are by no means dry tomes. Even minor players are well characterised, the pacing is fast, and the plots twist and turn.

Shardlake himself is a fascinating character: a hunchback in a time when superstition about his condition abounds, he has every reason to be bitter and to lash out at a world that often goes out of the way to be cruel to him, but he is not and does not. Indeed, he is a compassionate and honourable man of deep integrity seeking to do justice to the best of his considerable ability and is refreshing for it. Protagonists in most mystery series are dashing, womanising, too cool for school and prefer to solve problems with brawn. Shardlake's physical condition and general personality preclude this sort of James Bond nonsense; he is instead a brilliant legal mind who is socially awkward in his dealings outside the courtroom, is perpetually unlucky in love due in no small part to his fear of rejection, and who prevails by using his brain, sense of ethics, stubbornness, and courage (in the sense of carrying on despite long odds, great danger, and his own fear). Nor is he some unrealistically pure and virtuous paragon; he does his best, but at times is grumpy and short with people he cares about, leaps to erroneous conclusions, gets himself in over his head, and generally has believable flaws and foibles.

Further, Shardlake's worldview evolves and matures throughout the series as he reevaluates what he stands for and learns from his mistakes. When we first meet him in Dissolution, he is a keen reformer in the service of Thomas Cromwell, investigating a murder at a monastery in the process of being dissolved as Catholicism was gradually being outlawed. What he experiences over the course of that novel shakes his religious views to the core, leaving this once staunch religious radical no longer sure what he believes. By the third book in the series, he is becoming what would now be termed agnostic, struggling with his growing ambivalence about organised religion and unsure of his belief in God, dangerous beliefs to hold when one could be executed for voicing them. The novels increase in length as the series proceeds, but they rarely drag and I found that a couple of evenings turned into mornings as I could not put them down and go to sleep.

Five Tower Ravens out of five for the series as it stands so far. With the fifth and most recent book ending approximately six months before Henry VIII's death, I imagine it will continue into the reigns of Edward VI and of course Elizabeth I. I certainly hope so.

While I eagerly await the next installation, I've picked up a used copy of Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel and Peter Ackroyd's Life of Thomas More, in keeping with the theme.

[identity profile] feyandstrange.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 06:21 am (UTC)(link)
I shall now hope that my mother hasn't discovered these yet, as they sound like they're right up her alley and I'm stockpiling presents for her recovery from minor surgery next month. Thanks!

[identity profile] miss-adventure.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 06:53 am (UTC)(link)
I hope she enjoys them as much as I did! Here's to her surgery being a complete success and to a quick and complete recovery.

[identity profile] sahara-jinni.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
Oh no. Please. Not another book addiction!!! I have such WANT of these after reading your review!!!!

Must look into getting them for my kindle or audio for my cell phone....

oh god. sigh.

Will let you know what I think!!!! (rubs hands together with glee!)

[identity profile] miss-adventure.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 08:22 am (UTC)(link)
So I probably shouldn't tell you that I read the last book, which is over 600 pages, as slowly as I could just because I didn't want it to end. [grin]

I look forward to hearing your opinion!

[identity profile] sahara-jinni.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 08:24 am (UTC)(link)
You are so evil! But in the best ways possible!!

No worries - as soon as I'm finished you will know! :)

[identity profile] kambriel.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 04:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Columbo totally should have been a hunchback...

[identity profile] miss-adventure.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 07:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I can see it.

I also want John Mortimer to return from the grave to collaborate with CJ Sansom on a Horace Rumpole-Matthew Shardlake book. At the very least, one should time travel in order to share chambers with the other.

[identity profile] heartsease.livejournal.com 2012-01-05 11:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooohhh, definitely added to my reading list. Historical mysteries are probably my favorite genre at the moment. I just watched the first season of Cadfael, as well. :D

[identity profile] miss-adventure.livejournal.com 2012-01-06 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
I love those--they stay true to the books, and Derek Jacobi was excellent in the role of Cadfael.

I also highly recommend Barbara Hambly's Benjamin January series if you haven't read them, in which a freedman musician-cum-surgeon solves crime and battles horrendous racism in 1830s New Orleans.

[identity profile] coyotegoth.livejournal.com 2013-08-05 05:11 am (UTC)(link)
Hello- [livejournal.com profile] feyandstrange and [livejournal.com profile] digitalsidhe pointed me in this direction; as I place great stock in their opinion, I thought I'd say hello :)

[identity profile] miss-adventure.livejournal.com 2013-08-07 01:07 am (UTC)(link)
Well, hi!