Atonement of Blood (Sister Fidelma Mysteries Book 24): A dark and twisted Celtic mystery you won't be able to put down
By (Author) Peter Tremayne
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Book Publishing
13th May 2014
27th February 2014
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
368
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 24mm
300g
Winter, 670 AD. King Colg has invited the leading nobles and chieftains of his kingdom to a feast day. The gathering is interrupted by a religieux claiming that he has an important message for the King. Suddenly, the man, shouting 'Remember Liamuin!' stabs King Colg. The assassin is slain but Colg is on the verge of death.
Who is Liamuin It is a female name, and the mystery deepens as Colg's court speculates who is behind the assassination attempt. Colg's lawyer sister, Fidelma of Cashel, and her companion, Brother Eadulf are charged with solving the mystery. They must journey into the territory of their arch-enemies, the U Fidgente, uncover the evil secrets in the dark, brooding Abbey of Mungairit, and venture into the threatening mountain fastness ruled by a godless tyrant. Danger and violence are their constant companions until the final devastating revelation...The Sister Fidelma books give the readers a rattling good yarn. But more than that, they bring vividly and viscerally to life the fascinating lost world of the Celtic Irish. I put down The Spider's Web with a sense of satisfaction at a good story well told, but also speculating on what modern life might have been like had that civilisation survived - Ronan Bennett
Rich helpings of evil and tension with lively and varied characters - Historical Novels ReviewThe detail of the books is fascinating, giving us a vivid picture of everyday life at this time... the most detailed and vivid recreations of ancient Ireland - Irish ExaminerA brilliant and beguiling heroine. Immensely appealing - Publishers WeeklyPeter Tremayne is the fiction pseudonym of a well-known authority on the ancient Celts, who has utilised his knowledge of the Brehon law system and 7th-Century Irish society to create a new concept in detective fiction.