Another well written and plotted murder and smuggling mystery. It includes almost the whole gammut of human 'negative' emotions and reactions, from greed and revenge to assumption of guilt, fear and double-dealing. Nothing is quite what it seems almost up to the last page, with the reader not being too sure if they can take any character wholly at face value. This is not to say that truth and honesty don't get a look in, it's just that even the 'good guys' are sometimes drawn into the 'gray' areas of life.
The building of the main characters from one book to the next - Bartholomew, Brother Michael, Tulyet, Cynric etc - lends an authenticity to the proceedings. This is helped by the fact that some of the characters - both main and bit-parts - are actual historical figures.
Once again the smells, sight, sounds and strange mixture of philosophy & religion are brought vividly to life. At turns you wish you'd been there to experience life on a (sometimes) simpler level, but then you encounter the lack of sanitation, cleanliness & 'comforts' we take for granted today. How people managed to survive when medicine was not much more than astrology,symbolism & superstition is anyone's guess. The ongoing fight of Matthew Bartholomew against fear and ignorance, makes one wonder how medicine actually managed to progress to where we are at nowadays (!)
Another wonderful evocation of the history of Cambridge, and the truth that - although over 600 years ago - it is still greed, hate and revenge that motivates most crime.
Recommended.