Crispin: At the Edge of the World picks up right where its critically lauded predecessor left off, with Crispin and Bear fleeing after Crispin's noble sacrifice of his birthright as the lord's son in exchange for Bear's life, the man who had slowly morphed to become the type of father figure that Crispin had never previously known.
Now, though given free pass to leave the city where the endgame action in Crispin: The Cross of Lead had reached its climax, Crispin and Bear find themselves in no less danger than before as they try to put distance between themselves and their enemies as quickly as possible. The failed revolt that Bear had been integrally connected to was sacked by government soldiers, and the men that had somehow survived the deadly effects of the stricken rebellion have placed the blame for the plan's failure squarely on Bear's broad shoulders. They are on his track, now, and will kill him if given an opportunity to do so. Revenge burns hot when a whole group's dreams for the future begin to disintegrate, and Bear has become the obvious target for most of the wrath pouring forth from the broken revolutionary movement.
It's no longer as easy for Crispin and Bear to move around the English countryside as it was in the previous novel. Bear suffered severe injuries in that first book, and incurs further wounds near the start of this one, making him a near-invalid who depends on Crispin to physically help him hobble at top speed away from their enemies. Even when Crispin manages to find a seemingly peaceable English town, he knows that it will not remain so for long; Bear's pursuers are relentless, and hiding from them on a permanent basis is an impossible notion.
While trying to avoid ensnarement by Bear's dogged foes, Crispin comes to learn more about the man who has become his surrogate father. Bear's demons run deep, traceable back to his days not so long ago serving as a fighter in the Hundred Years' War between the English and the French, and it's obvious that he performed some actions as a soldier that haunt him worse than any of the wrong decisions he has made since that time, things too terrible to even confide to Crispin. Crispin is worried about Bear; the necessarily rigorous speed of their flight, added to the mental weight of Bear's dark past and the physical toll exacted by his considerable injuries, are clearly becoming a severe strain on the man, and there's no telling how much longer he can hold out under such conditions. But what would Crispin do without his brave friend and leader, the only one besides Crispin's mother who has ever shown any sign of caring about the boy? Crispin knows that he must save Bear, no matter where the journey to hide his sizable companion from his enemies may take them.
Along the way, the duo of Crispin and Bear meet a couple of new characters, some of whom become major players in the odyssey of this embattled young peasant from the 14th century. The new figures will have a dramatic impact on the story as it unfurls, and shed light on some facets of Crispin's and Bear's personalities that we didn't really see in the first book. I think that readers will be surprised by the Crispin: At the Edge of the World turns out, how it lays the groundwork for the final work in the Crispin trilogy that I hope will prove a fitting end to Crispin's memorable journey.
I think that the time period in which this book and its companion volumes are set is a good fit for Avi's writing. His unique brand of descriptive phrase resonates well in the context of feudal England, and his double ability in forming good characters and finding adequate means to express the vivid nature of the lands that they inhabit just seems to fit in well at this particular spot in history. I no doubt preferred Crispin: The Cross of Lead to this its sequel, as I perceive greater imaginative power and surprising plot developments of more depth and seasoning in the former novel, but this is a good book, as well. I wonder how the story will ever reach a fitting conclusion in just one more installment, but I'm sure that Avi has what it takes to close the deal in the best way possible. I would give two and a half stars to Crispin: At the Edge of the World.