Plague Land: A Novel (Somershill Manor Mysteries Book 1)
Plague Land: A Novel (Somershill Manor Mysteries Book 1) book cover

Plague Land: A Novel (Somershill Manor Mysteries Book 1)

Kindle Edition

Price
$13.99
Publisher
Pegasus Crime
Publication Date

Description

S. D. Sykes received an MA in Writing from Sheffield Hallam in England and is the author of Plague Land, The Butcher Bird, and City of Masks, all available from Pegasus Crime. She lives in England. Plague Land is a fascinating historical crime novel about a world turned upside down, inhabited by a rich cast of characters. A terrific debut and a wonderful start to a brand-new series. -- "Antonia Hodgson, author of The Devil in the Marshalsea" Plague Land is a gripping historical crime thriller, an engaging coming-of-age story, and a richly textured evocation of fourteenth century Kent. I was totally hooked. -- "Jake Woodhouse, author of The Amsterdam Quartet" In 1350s England, the bubonic plague has killed thousands and disrupted the feudal system. Oswald de Lacy, the youngest of his family, is destined to be a monk. His life is turned upside down when the plague carries off his father and older brothers...Sykes' debut, the first of a planned series, immerses the reader in the filth and ignorance of medieval Kent, presents a puzzling mystery, and introduces a hero who grows in stature as his problems increase. -- "Kirkus Reviews" It's no fun reading a medieval mystery if it isn't steeped in filth, squalor, and pestilence. S. D. Sykes gets right to the point in Plauge Land , which serves it all up in vivid detail...[Sykes] devises a clever plot to test Oswald's mettle, pitting the rational thinking he learned at a monastery against the superstitions of his age. -- "New York Times Book Review" Set in 1350, British author Sykes' debut provides everything a reader would want in a historical mystery: a gripping plot, vivid language, living and breathing characters, and an immersive depiction of the past...From the opening line, 'If I preserve but one memory at my own death, it shall be the burning of the dog-headed beast, ' Sykes grabs the reader by the throat. -- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)" There are plot twists aplenty... Plague Land is a quest to rebuild identity in an apocalyptic world, a theme that makes this new medieval series one I will be sure to follow. -- "Martine Bailey, author of An Appetite for Violets" There's a nice, cliche-free sharpness to Sykes' writing...that suggests a medieval Raymond Chandler at work, and there are no phony celebrations of the peasantry or earth-mothers thrusting herbal concoctions down grateful throats. Plenty of action and interesting characters, without intervention of the libertarian modern conscience that so often wrecks the medieval historical novel. -- "Independent (London)" With political intrigue and the social barriers of the Middle Ages in play, Sykes adds an intricate and intriguing debut to the ever-widening pool of medieval-era mysteries. Thrilling plot twists and layered characters abound in this rich tale of murder and mystery in fourteenth-century Kent. -- "Library Journal (starred review)" --This text refers to the audioCD edition.

Features & Highlights

  • In this chilling historical mystery, young girls go missing from a medieval English village and Lord Oswald de Lacy must find the killer before tragedy strikes again.
  • Oswald de Lacy was never meant to be the Lord of Somerhill Manor. Despatched to a monastery at the age of seven, sent back at seventeen when his father and two older brothers are killed by the Plague, Oswald has no experience of running an estate. He finds the years of pestilence and neglect have changed the old place dramatically, not to mention the attitude of the surviving peasants.  Yet some things never change. Oswald's mother remains the powerful matriarch of the family, and his sister Clemence simmers in the background, dangerous and unmarried. Before he can do anything, Oswald is confronted by the shocking death of a young woman, Alison Starvecrow. The ambitious village priest claims that Alison was killed by a band of demonic dog-headed men. Oswald is certain this is nonsense, but proving it—by finding the real murderer—is quite a different matter. Every step he takes seems to lead Oswald deeper into a dark maze of political intrigue, family secrets and violent strife. And then the body of another girl is found. Sarah Sykes brilliantly evokes the landscape and people of medieval Kent in this thrillingly suspenseful debut.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(779)
★★★★
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(520)
★★★
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(390)
★★
7%
(182)
28%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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"Now the Pestilence sleeps and the world is left only with the strong, the lucky, or the selfish. Which of those am I?"

With a gripping and sinister opening chapter, a small window to the past is revealed along with a narration that plunges the reader into a distorted setting with a strange mystery that consumes the narrator and ultimately drags the reader into murky depths of human nature. In this tale the reader stays in the shadows and listens to our narrator Lord Oswald de Lacy as he explains events that led to and the aftermath of widespread suspicion, continued desolation and conflicting beliefs. The story goes from dark macabre details of daily misery to an uncertain tomorrow but ultimately begins with a grisly discovery in the forests of West Kent in the year 1350 and the twists and turns you may or not expect that follow will keep the reader turning the pages until the final reveal.

In the end, I guess today wasn't my lucky day with this read. I thought this would be the perfect book to read today being "Friday the 13th". On the surface this title covered the expected and essential topics of a murder mystery set in England during the 14th century but I am so sorry to say, although a quick read it was disappointing. I dearly wanted to love this one and perhaps other readers will enjoy this more but for me it was just too modern in the delivery. The dialogue could be at times distracting with current phrases popping up more than once, a few characters including the narrator were a little too forward thinking for the century and almost too naive to believe. Finally the end resolution was atypical and left this reader more in an undesired realm than a fully historical one.

On the other side of the coin, I did enjoy the: setting, strange superstitions, herb lore and medical details. These parts shined and I was impressed how they were woven into the story. Also the final twist to this tale gave me a shiver, although the story was predictable up this point the final page was very well done. All in all, I would recommend Plague Land and I may try another in this new series. This is one read that may have a few noticeable negatives but this story set in a few years after the Great Mortality with a search for a monster, may just be worth it depending on the reader.
24 people found this helpful
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The idea of the book was good, but the book would be better if the ...

The idea of the book was good, but the book would be better if the author were a better writer.
3 people found this helpful
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A wonderful story that takes place in mid-thirteenth century

Quite an inventive tale. A wonderful story that takes place in mid-thirteenth century. Well written. The author did extensive research about the period and incorporates his knowledge in a most entertaining fashion. Definitely different than your average read. Highly recommended!
1 people found this helpful
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Whose Child

Have many mixed feelings about this book. The basic premise of the plot is good. But, so many occurrences happen to the seemingly clueless hero it lost me. It became one to many. Then two to many. I stopped counting. The climax explains it all, but to late. The shear number of twists and turns stretched it to far. Sadly.
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Three Stars

Fast reading. It is an eye opening
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Plague Land's Gritty Pleasures Are Infective

When I want to escape, there's nothing like a murder mystery set in the squalor, superstition, and stratified society of medieval England. Add excellent writing, fully and compellingly drawn characters, and a complex mystery that reveals new layers every time the appealing young protagonist seems to be on the brink of solving it, and you've got a terrific novel that rises above most of its genre.
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A Good Read!

I really enjoyed this. It is well written, an interesting plot and the main character thinks and behaves like the young man that he is. I learned a bit about the devastation that the Plague had on England and look forward to reading another book by Sam Sykes.
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It is nice to see MFA tropes absent from a well written ...

It is nice to see MFA tropes absent from a well written book. I will willingly read other books by Sykes.
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First novel not bad

This book was a first novel by this author and despite it being a bit choppy to read in the beginning it developed into a good mystery. It did give some insight into the more rural life in England after the Bubonic plague ravaged the population and was a fairly decent mystery as well. I will read the next book in her series soon
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Engaging hero, start of a good historical mystery series

I love historical mysteries and am happy to discover a new series