SRB: Hunchback Lawyer & the Madman
Links Independent
Review Andrea
Jutson is a South Auckland crime writer, reviewer and
journalist
Macmillan,
$38, Reviewed by ANDREA JUTSON for the Scoop Review of
Books
C J Sansom’s Shardlake series is not only a
vividly realistic chronicle of Tudor England, but an
engrossing set of whodunnits to boot.
In his fourth
Matthew Shardlake book, Revelation, the hunchbacked
lawyer faces his most terrifying opponent yet – a madman
who is killing lapsed Protestants in ever more gruesome
ways. As Shardlake discovers, the manner of their
deaths mirrors the prophecies of the Book of Revelation. To
make matters even more alarming, the killings must be kept
from the tyrannical Henry VIII, for fear the deaths are
somehow related to his new love, Catherine Parr. Amid all
the murders and politics, Shardlake comes to realise that
the killer is also stalking him, targeting his friends and
acquaintances.
At the same time, there is an intriguing
subplot about a young Protestant reformer who may or may not
be going mad, taking us inside the damp walls of the Bedlam
hospital for the insane.
There is enough factual
history here to delight the early-modern scholar, talking of
the dissolution of the monasteries and the waning years of
Henry’s reign, but it’s the characters who really make
this book come alive. At times the characterisations can be
off-putting, such as Shardlake’s moody assistant, Jack
Barak, who neglects his wife in favour of whoring and
boozing after the loss of their child. The good guys are
never completely pure, even the otherwise saintly Brother
Guy, a physician struggling with homosexual feelings towards
his slimy apprentice that threaten to turn him against
Shardlake.
As a lawyer and historian in his own right,
Sansom creates a world that rings utterly true in all its
dark detail, and his late medieval language seldom gets in
the way of the story. A little more lightness is sometimes
desirable, especially in poor Shardlake’s blighted
personal life, and some passages seem repetitive and
unnecessary, particularly at those points where Shardlake
visits the Bedlam. Although it eventually ties in with the
main story in the manner of all good detective novels, the
subplot doesn’t move forward as much as it could, and
becomes a bit tiresome in places, disrupting the flow of the
book.
Otherwise there is very little to criticize about
Revelation, a much more entertaining read than its bleak
predecessor, Sovereign, and the next Shardlake novel is
eagerly anticipated. Bring on the reign of Elizabeth.
A
Conversation with C J
Sansom