In this, Book 5 of the series, Brother Hermitage and Wat the Weaver have developed into an even more entertaining duo than earlier. Hermitage is a bit more world-savvy, thanks to Wat, making the duo reminiscent of TV's entertaining "Due South" duo: idealistic Canadian Mountie paired with the jaded Chicago cop.
The duo are off to Wales in this tale, and the author has a lot of fun with Celts, Druids and their mystical religion, not to mention stone circles. The Norman invasion continues with more burning and killing, which is the threat if Hermitage and Wat don't succeed on their mission for the invader King.
As with all the books in this inventive and very funny series, the author calls on real history, and insights into human nature, to ground the story. We get a glimpse of the past on a very human level, seeing fears, faults, foibles, violence, schemes, etc., all the things most history books gloss over.
I was reminded of comedian Steve Martin's caveman sketch on TV's "Saturday Night Live", when the author shows in the book how innovation, goodness and intelligence were threatening to people of the past, who embraced superstitions, violent expressions of power and hereditary roles in society.
The author makes the very difficult job of writing humor look like a walk in the park. He is especially entertaining when describing people, clearly relishing the greater variety of types that surely existed in the harsh past.
Hermitage's education in the real world continues in this book, and I hope it will continue for a long time to come! I received a review-copy of this book. This is my honest review.