Reading the Detectives discussion

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Vale of Tears
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Vale of Tears (Bradecote and Catchpoll #5) - SPOILER Thread - (Sept/Oct 25)
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I think Wakelin is coming into his own as a member of the team, and I enjoy the camaraderie between the three. And the kind, decent hospitable priest who puts the three up for days in his humble home because the lord is too vicious and rude to do so was a great character.
I agree with all your comments, Susan - I was a bit disappointed with this book overall, although pleased that it wasn't as violent as the previous one. Again there wasn't much of a mystery element to the plot, and the villain is over the top, as you say. I'm also noticing that we aren't getting much sense of the historical background now, in terms of the war between Stephen and Maud.
I do like the camaraderie between the detectives and it is good to see Wakelin becoming a more confident member of the team, as you say, but I feel as if the series is falling off from the promise of the early books.
I do like the camaraderie between the detectives and it is good to see Wakelin becoming a more confident member of the team, as you say, but I feel as if the series is falling off from the promise of the early books.

Susan, thanks for mentioning St Cyr, I haven't tried them but must do so. I see my local library has the first book.
April, 1144. A body is found floating by Fladbury mill, a man who has been stabbed but not robbed. Undersheriff Hugh Bradecote, Serjeant Catchpoll and their young apprentice Walkelin discover him to be a horse dealer with a beautiful young wife who strays. Did the wife or a lover get rid of him? What link is there to a defrocked monk who was hanged for theft, and where is the horse dealer's steed?
The trio must unravel the thread that ties together seemingly disparate deaths before even more people die.
Please feel free to post spoilers in this thread.