I love historical fiction! I love thrillers! I just got a double treat!
Hugh De Luc and his loving wife, Sophie, peasant vassals under their evil liege lord, Baldwin, Duke of Treille, scratch out a meager living as the owners of the local inn in Veille du Père. The papal inducement of a promise of freedom from the grinding servitude of feudalism proves too much to resist and Hugh joins a rag-tag army of Catholic crusaders marching to the Holy Land to retake the city of Jerusalem from the infidels. In the presence of horrific carnage and violence, Hugh undergoes an epiphany of sorts during a battle encounter with a kindly Turk soldier who spares his life. Realizing the futility of what he is doing, Hugh deserts and returns to France only to discover that his infant son has been murdered, his home and inn have been burned to the ground and Sophie has been kidnapped and imprisoned by Norcross, one of Baldwin's bullying minion knights - or so he thinks!
With THE JESTER, Patterson and Gross have achieved something very special indeed. Using the setting and background of medieval France and the Crusades, they crafted a finely polished veneer and laid it on precisely thick enough to provide an exciting, believable and entirely unique cover for what actually lies underneath - a tale that is, in fact, 100% modern high-speed thriller. For example, Hugh's skillful adoption of the guise of a jester and his adroit entry into Baldwin's castle is, by any other name, an undercover infiltration operation into the enemy camp! The relic from the Holy Land that Hugh doesn't even realize he carries and that causes so much death around him, could have been, in a more modern story, a piece of microfilm with some critical information worth millions to the holder! Despite so many of the plot pieces being so typical of this type of novel (I'm sure that some would say trite) - weak underdogs rallying to the strength and moral courage of a new leader; a tender scene in which Hugh's wife dies in his arms only minutes after he has found her; newly found love providing a reason to persevere; a sex scene just before the battle with a charging enemy - they are put together in such a fashion as to be irresistible!
I'll succumb to a cliché myself - THE JESTER was a rollicking great read and I enjoyed it immensely. Somewhere between the next Alex Cross and Women's Murder Club novel, I sure hope that Patterson finds time to give us another "historical thriller"!
Paul Weiss