The Prioress’ Tale
Dame Frevisse #7
By Margaret Frazer
Reviewed February 23, 2024
When I started reading this book the other day, I didn’t realize right away that I had read it once before, and thanks to Goodreads I was able to refresh myself as to when that first reading was (2015) and what I thought of it (I liked it). Back then, I wrote, “This introduction to the Dame Frevisse series has made me eager to delve further into this series,” but it took several more years before I could make good on doing that. Back then, my interest in 15th century England hadn’t exploded into the full-blown fascination that it is today, so a re-read was definitely in order, especially as I’ve come to know and love so many of the characters from both the Dame Frevisse series and the Joliffe series.
Speaking of Joliffe (my favorite traveling player-turned-spy), although originally written in 1997, this book chronologically follows A Play of Heresy, which was written in 2011 – more than 10 years later. Although the author has tried to tie things together when it comes to Joliffe, who has a prominent role in this story, there are a few minor inconsistencies but nothing that was too glaring or distracting.
Domina Alys, the domineering, bullying prioress of St. Frideswide’s, is one of those characters you love to hate. She may at heart love St. Frideswide’s, but it is a malignant, narcissistic kind of love that blinds her to what it truly means to serve God and her Church. Instead, she is more interested in worldly prestige and building up the nunnery into a place to rival Coventry and other places of pilgrimage, and to do this, she has allowed members of her extended family, the Godfreys, to take up residence at the convent and turns a blind eye when they run amok.
Matters become worse when Sir Reynold and members of his entourage return from what has been nothing less than a raiding party, bringing with them a young girl, Joice, who he intends on forcing to marry a family member, Benet (the only halfway decent person in this lot of scoundrels) and is willing to make it a marriage by rape if the girl doesn’t agree. You see, she’s not just some lowly peasant, but the daughter of a wealthy merchant, and marrying her would bring an influx of money and land into the Godfrey clan.
Petty vengeance, corruption, and eventually death all rear their ugly heads at St. Frideswide’s, with Domina Alys slowly losing her grip on things and taking out her anger and frustration on the nuns, especially Dame Frevisse. Things come to a head when Joice’s uncle and the bishop both arrive at the priory to find out just what is going on…and why.
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Original review, posted August 3, 2016
As much as I enjoy medieval mysteries, I've never read any by Margaret Frazer, so this book served as an introduction to her books, and I have to say that I was quite pleased.
The newly elected prioress of St. Fridewide's -- Dame Alys -- is about as vain a woman as can be found. She runs her priory with the proverbial iron fist, with little thought given to Christian charity. Then some of her relatives show up and are given carte blanche, eating the nuns out of house and home, and running roughshod over the locals. All this leads up to abduction, murder, and the violation of the holy foundation. It is up to one of the sisters, Dame Frevisse, to help solve the mysteries, all while on the bad side of Dame Alys for daring to question the prioress's actions.
This introduction to the Dame Frevisse series has made me eager to delve further into this series.