Dark Fire C J Sansom Book Review Brian Lee Durfee Spoiler Free Bonkers Ending To This Vid
Dark Fire Audiobook By C J Sansom Hoopla Wherein our hero durfee reviews the great british midieval mystery novel dark fire by c. j. sansom. #greekfire #cjsansom #thetudors more. “dark fire” is a pleasing story mystery mixed with a nice characterization of the novel’s protagonist, hunchback lawyer matthew shardlake. the author builds on the characteristics from the first novel in this series (“dissolution”) in a manner that adds shades of depth to lawyer shardlake.
Brian Lee Durfee Book Reviews The Fantasy Review Brian lee durfee is the author of the forgetting moon, the blackest heart, and the lonesome crown, all published by simon & schuster's saga press. he is also a book reviewer,. This is only natural in henrician london, where it is dangerous to speak of any politics or religion as neither reformists or papists can be saved from burning. i highly recommend dark fire by c.j. sansom. this is the second book in the shardlake series. please see my review for dissolution here. I'm currently being ruled over by 3 cats (rafferty, bodhi rook & yersinia pestis), who i can mostly get not to chew on book covers. lately, i'll read anything, though science fiction and romance will always be on the bottom of the pile. I read dissolution – the first book in the matthew shardlake series – some time ago, and it left me somewhat ambivalent. a good story, but with some rather ill defined characters, and an ending that was a bit of an anti climax.
Dark Fire By C J Sansom Waterstones I'm currently being ruled over by 3 cats (rafferty, bodhi rook & yersinia pestis), who i can mostly get not to chew on book covers. lately, i'll read anything, though science fiction and romance will always be on the bottom of the pile. I read dissolution – the first book in the matthew shardlake series – some time ago, and it left me somewhat ambivalent. a good story, but with some rather ill defined characters, and an ending that was a bit of an anti climax. The pace is rapid, the list of potential villains lengthy and the solution satisfyingly unclear until the final pages. sansom’s writing can be clunky at times but what makes amends for this is the introduction of barak as shardlake’s assistant. A suspenseful, professional grade north country procedural whose heroine, a deft mix of compassion and attitude, would be welcome to return and tie up the gaping loose end box leaves. Conclusion: a gripping tale of morality and justice c.j. sansom skillfully crafts a rich narrative that intertwines history with an intricate mystery. “dark fire” is more than just a tale of revenge and survival; it is about morality, the struggle for justice, and the nuances of humanity. In theory, i should adore sansom’s matthew shardlake series, but i just don’t. the history is impeccable as is the ability of sansom to evoke the tudor period but the mysteries don't interest me, their solutions are unsatisfying, and the characters seem flat.
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