The Widow's Tale by Margaret Frazer

BUY IT NEW

  • Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
    See Details
  • This item is currently out of stock.
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780425200186&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

BUY IT USED

21 copies from $1.99

See All Available

(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: January 2005
  • 272pp
    Buy it Used: 21 copies from $1.99 See All Available
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Customer Reviews
    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2005
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 272pp

    Synopsis

    Recently widowed and still grieving, Cristiana Helyngton finds her life wrenched apart by her late husband's greedy and ambitious relatives, who are determined to have control of her lands and her daughters. Kidnapped, defamed, and imprisoned in a nunnery, she must find a way to save herself before she can save her children.

    For Dame Frevisse of St. Frideswide's nunnery, Cristiana is at first simply a duty among others, but questions rise and troubles deepen—and then turn deadly. Cristiana, to secure her freedom and save her daughters, must use a secret entrusted to her by her husband as he was dying-but it is a secret that could bring down those lords nearest the king and destroy, rather than save, those most dear to her.

    Frevisse, drawn into trouble far deeper than she initially imagined, must decide where her deepest loyalties lie: to the truth-or to England's peace. And whatever she chooses, in the end her help may be of little use against the ruthless men threatened by the secret on which all of Cristiana's hopes depend.

    Author Biography: Margaret Frazer was a finalist for an Edgar(r) Award for best original paperback for The Servant's Tale and The Prioress' Tale.

    Publishers Weekly

    Don't be discouraged by a confusing hawk-hunting scene introducing numerous characters at the start of Frazer's 14th Dame Frevisse mystery (after 2004's The Hunter's Tale), because what follows is a smooth and absorbing saga of conspiracy and treachery in 15th-century England. In 1449, landowner Edward Helyngton lies on his deathbed while his jealous cousin Laurence waits raptor-like to swoop down and seize his estate. Soon after Edward's demise, his widow, Cristiana, is banished to St. Frideswide's nunnery, where she's forced to do penance face down on the cold chapel floor for unspecified sins alleged by Laurence's agents. Living on bread and water, the embittered Cristiana eventually tells her sad tale to Dame Frevisse, who is at first only a sympathetic listener, but later takes a more active sleuthing role. A tantalizing secret confided to Cristiana by her dying husband turns out to have stunning political implications. The suspense builds steadily toward a visit from King Henry VI in this well-wrought tale involving murder, treason and "layers of ambition and betrayal." Agent, Nancy Yost. (Jan. 5) FYI: A two-time Edgar nominee, Frazer is also the author of A Play of Isaac (2004), the first in a new medieval mystery series. "Margaret Frazer" is the pseudonym of Gail Frazer, who collaborated with Mary Pulver Kuhfeld on the first six books in the series. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Margaret Frazer was a finalist for an Edgar(r) Award for best original paperback for The Servant's Tale and The Prioress' Tale.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Dame Frevisse stories are an absolute delight!by Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    September 24, 2006: With the death of her beloved husband, Edward, Cristiana Helyngton thinks her world has come to an end. Unfortunately it's only the start of her troubles. Her unscrupulous brother-in-law promptly and secretly obtains custody of Cristiana, her lands, and her two daughters, by representing Cristiana as a madwoman to the powerful Duke of Suffolk. With her brother off to Ireland in service as a knight to the Duke of York, Suffolk's political adversary, there's no one to protect or rescue Cristiana as Laurence Helyngton carries her off to confinement in a convent. There she lives in prescribed and bitter penitence, half starved and terrified on behalf of her girls. She knows that Laurence plans to force 12-year-old Mary to wed his son, securing the deceased Edward's estate under Laurence's control. After that he intends to place 8-year-old Jane in a nunnery, unless she's needed to replace Mary if the older daughter fails to seal the marriage by producing an heir. But Laurence Helyngton has made one huge mistake. He's committed his sister-in-law to St. Frideswide's, where Sister Frevisse is hosteler. The gifted amateur detective soon suspects things aren't exactly as Cristana's 'guardian' has described them. As she and Domina Elisabeth are drawn ever more deeply into the Helyngtons' escalating conflict, Frevisse realizes that people far more powerful than Cristana and Laurence may stand or fall based on its outcome. Among them is Alice, Duchess of Suffolk, Frevisse's estranged but still beloved cousin and possibly King Henry VI himself. Margaret Frazer's meticulously researched history, well-drawn characters, and credible plots have me reading her mystery novels eagerly, and that's remarkable because this genre usually leaves me cold. Dame Frevisse stories are an absolute delight, from first page to last, as Frazer immerses herself in the details of medieval life and takes me along for the ride. Can't wait to get my hands on another!

    fantastic refreshing medieval mysteryby harstan

    Reader Rating:
    See Detailed Ratings

    November 07, 2004: Though he spends a lot of time at the royal court, Edward and Cristiana Helyngton have been have been happily married for years raising two preadolescent daughters Jane and Mary. However, in 1449 when Edward returns to Hertfordshire from his latest stint with the royals, he is very ill. His avarice cousin Laurence, coveting Edward?s larger estate, demands the ailing man place Jane in a nunnery and marry Mary to his son Clement. Edward says no, but soon afterward, he dies.--- Cristiana is unable to grieve her loss because Laurence abducts her and places her in St. Frideswide's nunnery. Dame Frevisse sees Cristiana as another dumped obligation, but soon events take deadly twists. Before dying Edward entrusted his beloved spouse with a secret that could destroy the noble inner circle. Cristiana will use that knowledge to risk her life in order to save her children from her vile in-law. The imperturbable Sister Frevisse feels caught in a growing storm in which those who know the truth are subject to murder but she realizes if revealed could lead to civil war.--- The fourteenth Sister Frevisse medieval mystery is a fantastic refreshing entry as the ?unflappable? nun finds even she feels overwhelmed with the momentous events swirling around the widow who will do anything perhaps even murder to protect her children. As usual Margaret Frazier provides an action-packed story line that focuses deeply at mid fifteenth century England starring a terrific protagonist. However, the machinations in a deadly game between nobles, Laurence, and Cristiana make for a fabulous WIDOW?S TALE that shows why Ms. Frazier has received Edgar nominations for this series (could this be her award winner?).---- Harriet Klausner