A short story from The Chronicles of Brother Hermitage.
Once upon a time there was a medieval monk who solved crime. No, not that one.
This is Brother Hermitage, a medieval monk who happens to be around when crimes get solved. His full length mysteries, The Heretics of De'ath and The Garderobe of Death are available on Kindle. The Tapestry of Death is coming soon.
In this tale Brother Hermitage entered a hostelry to escape the cold and could not possibly imagine the bizarre situation he would find. No, really, he has very little imagination.
If you are looking for a serious exploration of the period, a considered evaluation of the moral imperatives of eleventh century England, you are in entirely the wrong place. In fact, if you take your history at all seriously, you are advised to move on.
'Like Cadfael visits Discworld' 'Laughed till I cried' (twice) 'Fresh and very funny'
Howard of Warwick is but a humble chronicler with the blind luck to stumble upon manuscripts which describe the goings-on of Brother Hermitage and his companion Wat the weaver.
His work has been heard, seen and read, most of it accompanied by laughter and some of it by money. His peers have even seen fit to recognize his unworthy efforts with a prize for making up stories.
There are now eighteen - make that twenty - novels of Brother Hermitage, the most medieval of detectives, loose on the world and they have found considerable success with the buying public.
The most recent outpouring from the scriptorium is The King's Investigator Part II.
Tales of Hermitage continue to flow forth with few checks for accuracy. There are even short stories available for free.
There is a dedicated web page, HowardofWarwick.com.
Messages can be left care of Howard@howardofwarwick.com and Howardofwarwick can be followed on Twitter
The Shorts is compilation of very individual Brother Hermitage tales that build a chronological profile of the serial-offending medieval amateur sleuth.
Each mini-sketch tells how he effortlessly attracts “the happening of bad things”. And those happenings pretty much sum up the story of Hermitage’s early life where he first channelled his inner Cadfael, only to discover that having a REALLY annoying inquisitive streak could seriously damage his judgement.
With fabulous gems like "Hermitage’s curiosity was like a second bladder, if it got too full he simply had to let some questions leak out no matter how embarrassing the result…” you can’t possibly go wrong if you follow the trials of an inoffensive monk with a gift for involuntarily offending everyone he meets, as he can’t quite kick the habit of opening his mouth.
This medieval parody provides non-stop amusement and a great way to spend an afternoon.
Hard to explain...so truly laugh out loud funny I read it aloud to my husband and we laughed and laughed and giggled and laughed. And...some truly great writing. The vocabulary is challenging and the sentences are long but clearly understandable and soooo... Funny! We loved this and will now begin to read more of this series...a vacation from real life and puzzles to ponder in the middle of the night when our single or collective minds wake to try and figure out what really happened here. Highly recommended.
I suppose it makes an effort, but not much of one.
Described as hilariously funny, but my guess is that it doesn't fit my personal sense of humour, as I was mostly just bored, despite the intriguing summary that got me to download it in the first place. Also, though the writer says he had an editor, I think he could do with a better one - speaking as a proof-reader and beta-reader myself, that is. I don't think the Brother Hermitage series will prove my thing, so I'm done. 1.5 stars (the half star for effort).
Having seen this series on Kindle, I decided to try the Shorts just to see if I liked the character and stories. The short answer is No. Not for me I’m afraid - just couldn’t take to Hermitage at all.
A series of 'excerpts' from the full novels of each. A teaser / tester if you will -to see if it's the reader's cuppa.
Can't see why not when the main character, a monk, his innocence and intelligence (of the era) made him look gormless yet fearless. Brother Hermitage escapades along with HoW's agent and critique(r) made the whole set up worthy of reading. Though I think HoW's agent didn't do a creditable job of editing. There were grammatical errors and misspelling in the MSs.
Despite this publication sneaking past me when I wasn't looking, I discovered its existence and settled to reading it immediately. Another work of genius by Mr Of Warwick. Missed Wat but, otherwise loved it. On reflection I think Hermitage may remind me more of Piglet than Pooh with his air of bewilderment.