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The Angel in the Glass

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
'A thought-provoking plot, and an affecting and powerful conclusion make this one of Clare's best' - Booklist Starred Review
Physician-sleuth Dr Gabriel Taverner uncovers dark secrets in his small Devon village in the second of this intriguing historical mystery series.
June, 1604. When the emaciated body of a vagrant is found on the edge of the moor, it's the verdict of physician Gabriel Taverner that the man died of natural causes – but is all as it seems? Who was the dead man, and why had he come to the small West Country village of Tavy St Luke's to die cold, sick and alone? With no one claiming to have known him, his identity remains a mystery.
Then a discovery found buried in a nearby field throws a strange new light on the case ... and in attempting to find the answers, Gabriel Taverner and Coroner Theophilus Davey unearth a series of shocking secrets stretching back more than fourteen years.|1604. When the emaciated body of a vagrant is found on the moor, it's the verdict of physician Gabriel Taverner that the man died of natural causes. But who was he, and why had he come to this small village to die cold, sick and alone? Attempting to find the answers, Taverner unearths a series of shocking secrets stretching back fourteen years.
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    • Booklist

      Starred review from November 1, 2016
      After the success of her Aelf Fen and Hawkenlye books, Clare turns her talents to a new historical mystery series, this one set in rural Devon, England, in the early seventeenth century. Former ship's doctor turned country physician Gabriel Taverner is called to investigate a brutal death, which at first looks like suicide. There are few clues to the dead man's identity, and it's only coincidence that leads Gabriel to the first loose thread that will eventually unravel the twisted truth. As he and local coroner Theophilus Davey work together to try to solve the case, they find what at first seem to be tenuous links to the area's silk trade. As those links become ever stronger, Gabriel and Theo eventually begin to suspect the tragic, which will have frightening implications for Gabriel and his family. But what is most shocking is that even those closest to him have been hiding dark and dangerous secrets. As always, Clare has carefully researched the period she is writing about and offers authentic, engaging historical detail, but her real gift is as a superb storyteller whose clever, twisty plots; believable characters; and skillful writing will engross the reader from first page to last.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2018
      Clare's books are captivating, unusual, and magical, and her latest, set in seventeenth-century England and featuring physician Gabriel Taverner, is no exception. When Gabe is called to a remote hut where a dead body has been found, he can barely tell the sex of the victim because the corpse is so badly emaciated and ravaged. He declares death by natural causes, but he's worried by the odd swellings on the victim's face, hoping they don't indicate leprosy. He's then temporarily distracted when the local minister, Jonathan Carew, begins acting oddly. Gabe eventually discovers that Jonathan has unearthed some beautiful glass panels that were taken from his church and buried during the reign of Henry VIII. One panel, intricate and utterly entrancing, stands out from the rest. It's only by chance that Gabe discovers a link between the dead body in the hut and the glass panels, and once he does, he wishes he hadn't, because the story that links the two is so brutally tragic that even Gabe, a doctor who's seen just about everything, is devastated. Wonderfully authentic period details, larger-than-life characters, a thought-provoking plot, and an affecting and powerful conclusion make this one of Clare's best.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 3, 2018
      Set in James I’s England, Clare’s impressive sequel to 2017’s A Rustle of Silk reveals the darkness beneath the seemingly bright and buoyant West Country village of Tavy St. Luke’s. Gabriel Taverner, a former ship’s doctor who lives with his young widowed sister in Tavy St. Luke’s, is called by his friend Theophilus Davey, the vigilant coroner, to examine the corpse of an unidentified man found in a desolate hut. The man looks emaciated and impoverished, but as Taverner seeks the cause of death, he hears reports of a number of seemingly unconnected strange events taking place around the village: an intruder at a manor, a parish priest stricken with grief mid-sermon, the discovery of treasure by children in a hostile farmer’s glen. The story keeps readers guessing and increasingly invested in the core group of finely nuanced characters, until it builds to a gruesome murder that uncovers the terrible secrets certain people have been desperate to hide. The mystery satisfies with a tragic, far-reaching conclusion. Clare reinforces her place among the top rank of historical writers. Agent: Laura Longrigg, MBA (U.K.).

    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2018
      A physician and a coroner must make do with rudimentary crime-solving tools in 1604 England.Dr. Gabriel Taverner and his clever sister, Celia, have set up housekeeping together after an accident ended his career in the Navy and a murder changed her circumstances (A Rustle of Silk, 2017). They're both worried about their friend Jonathan Carew, the vicar of St. Luke's, after they notice a few moments of blankness on his face during his Sunday sermon. But Carew denies any problems, and Gabriel's energies are redirected when coroner Theophilus Davey asks him to examine a body found in a shack. The young man with fleshy lumps that might be leprosy apparently died of natural causes. The only clue found on the body is a partial sketch on fine paper of a beautiful face. Soon the dead man is tied to a burglary attempt at Wrenbeare, the large but neglected home of the Fairlight family, who deny that there was an intruder. Lady Clemence Fairlight is the widow of Sir Thomas, with whom she had two daughters who also live at Wrenbeare along with the older one's husband. At length Carew asks Gabriel to help him uncover five stunning stained glass panels that were at one time in the windows of St. Luke's Little Chapel. During the days of Henry VIII, vast numbers of religious houses and artifacts were destroyed, and even now there is still some danger in displaying the windows. A sixth panel of a later date is a powerful image of a naked man worshiping a stunningly handsome naked angel. The horrible death of Lady Fairlight brings the varied problems together, forcing Gabriel and Theo to dig in the present and the past to uncover a shocking story.Plenty of historical detail and a twisty story make the second in Clare's new series a step up from the first.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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