Reviews: The Easter Sepulchre (1)
“A satisfyingly complex historical crime novel”
(Paperback)
by David Morley
This is the thirteenth novel in the series of novels featuring Hugh de Singleton, a fourteenth-century knight, surgeon, and bailiff to Lord Gilbert, third Baron Talbot. In the village of Bampton, Oxfordshire it is Easter. At Good Friday vespers, in St. Beornwald’s church, the priest closes the service by wrapping the host in a linen cloth and placing it, along with a crucifix, in the niche that serves as the Easter Sepulchre where it will remain until Easter morning. Until that time, the Sexton and the three priests’ clerks will watch over the Sepulchre day, and night. The next morning, at first light, Hugh is woken from his bed to be informed that Odo Fuller, one of the priests’ clerks keeping vigil over the Sepulchre appears to have abandoned his post in the night and is missing. Hugh organises an extensive search of the village and the surrounding area but there is no sign of the clerk. When his body is finally found, it is apparent a murder has been committed. It is not long before a likely culprit is identified. However, one of the priests of St Beornwald’s, Father Thomas, calls on Hugh to express his concern that the man identified, Ernaud le Tournier, may have been falsely accused. So, even though this crime took place within the jurisdiction of a bishop’s court and not that of the King’s Eyre, Hugh finds himself charged with undertaking a more thorough investigation and discovering the truth of what happened within the church in the dead of night. As every avenue of investigation that Hugh explores takes him no further towards the discovery of the murderer and as the death toll rises Hugh comes to realise that the events surrounding the death of Odo are more difficult to fathom than he, at first, realised. But despite the false trails and blind alleys Hugh slowly and methodically examines and tests the evidence before him and so comes at length to the solution of the mystery. I have to admit that, in spite of his having produced a number of novels, I was not aware of the author, Mel Starr, or his work when I began to read his thirteenth novel in the series, “The Easter Sepulchre”. He has an extensive knowledge of the period in which he has chosen to set his novels. This gives a good sense of realism to the narrative as there is a great deal of authentic detail in his description of the day to day lives of people of the time, prosperous and poor alike. Even the dialogue is evocative of how people at that time may have spoken. The characters are varied and nicely drawn, and the author describes well their relationships and interaction with a convincing sense of their individual status in society. The plot is pleasingly complex and is resolved rather neatly at the end. There is little that I can find to criticise in this novel other than perhaps that it might be considered by some to be rather sedate and lacking in pace; and maybe that by the time I had finished the story I was perhaps a little too well informed about the diet of people of the fourteenth century. But, in truth, reading this novel has been a pleasant and satisfying experience and I shall, no doubt, be seeking out other novels in this sequence.
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The Easter Sepulchre

The Easter Sepulchre

Fiction, Crime & Thrillers
Mel Starr (author)
Paperback Published on: 18/09/2020
Price: £8.99
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