Terri's Reviews > Revelation

Revelation by C.J. Sansom
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really liked it
bookshelves: own, historical-fiction, britain-fiction

I may consistently give these C.J. Sansom books 4 out of 5 stars (with the exception of the third in the series, Sovereign, which I gave 5 stars to), but I do thoroughly enjoy them.
For me they are the perfect holiday read, or windy wet weather read. Sit in a corner with a cup of tea, curl up under a thick quilt in bed, lock yourself away or escape every evening to its pages.


C.J Sansom recreates the Tudor world with an ease that all historical fiction authors should aspire to. The stories are not always fast paced or addictive, but for me it is not really the power of the story or plot that keeps me coming back again and again, it is the power of the author to open a window in time through which I feel and see and smell Tudor England.
It happens everytime I pick up one of these books. They are most reliable in that respect.

In this fourth instalment of the Matthew Shardlake series, our window is into 1543 London. Henry VIII is courting Catherine Parr, the Parliament has brought in controversial anti-reformist legislation - the legislation that includes prohibiting women and the working classes from reading the bible – and religious radicals and conservatives are pulling apart the cultural and social fabric of the city.


Within this maelstrom, Matthew and Barak are confronted with an all new horror. Gruesome deaths the like of which they have never seen. The like of which the city has never seen. Orchestrated with the methodical cunning and pathological cruelty that we relate now to being the potential handiwork
of serial killers. But in the Sixteenth Century, a time of intense religious fervour, some can only fathom it as demonic possession.
Running parallel to these killings is the story of a young man, Adam Kite. His peculiar and desperate behaviour having landed him in The Bedlam, Shardlake is appointed to the boys case and he must solve the riddle of this young man's mind before the conservative powers would have him burned or some such other grisly fate.

If there is anything I can point to as a negative with this book - a negative for me at least - it would be the amount of religious discussion inserted into the story. For other readers it would be appropriate and interesting, and while I do agree with its appropriateness (as the country was alive with religious debate) I would not agree with it being interesting. I would have shaved it back a degree as it got in the way of the semi thrilling hunt for a killer or killers.
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Reading Progress

March 25, 2010 – Shelved
July 16, 2010 – Shelved as: own
October 17, 2010 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
March 11, 2011 – Started Reading
January 26, 2013 –
page 40
5.95%
January 27, 2013 –
page 70
10.42%
January 27, 2013 –
page 120
17.86%
January 28, 2013 –
page 150
22.32%
January 30, 2013 –
page 220
32.74%
February 1, 2013 –
page 300
44.64%
February 2, 2013 –
page 370
55.06%
February 4, 2013 –
page 420
62.5%
February 6, 2013 –
page 560
83.33%
February 7, 2013 –
page 630
93.75%
February 7, 2013 –
page 600
89.29%
February 8, 2013 –
page 630
93.75%
February 8, 2013 – Finished Reading
February 11, 2013 – Shelved as: britain-fiction

Comments Showing 1-5 of 5 (5 new)

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Bryn Hammond Exactly. It's a wet, windy day, I'm in escape mode and Matthew Shardlake is just right to spend it with. I like our crookback lawyer and I like the pungently-described gibbets of Henry's England (wot a bastard). I mean to polish off Sovereign today. See if I don't.


Terri That Henry hey. I have never read him/seen him in such a way. I love when an author can make me see a real character of history so vividly.
The putrefied leg description stayed with me. :)


Richard I think this one is my favorite in the series to date (I'm very happy to recently have learnt about the 6th in the series due for release in October - I feared Shardlake had been put to bed). Very nice review!


Terri No way! Due for release in October?? Thankyou for telling me. I thought it had been put to bed too! I am excited now.


Helen Birkbeck I think the religious discussion is appropriatno position but sheds light on various views of the time - and has connections with extremist religion today.


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