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The Rose Rent (Brother Cadfael Mysteries) [Mass Market Paperback]

Ellis Peters
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Paperback £6.89  
Mass Market Paperback, Nov 1997 --  
Audio, CD, Audiobook £12.91  
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Book Description

Nov 1997 Brother Cadfael Mysteries (Book 13)

The disappearance of a young and beautiful heiress tests Brother Cadfael’s investigative powers to the limit.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Mysterious Press; Reissue edition (Nov 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0446405337
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446405331
  • Product Dimensions: 10.5 x 1.6 x 17.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 4,524,155 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Cosy as a teapot. (THE TIMES) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

In his thirteenth chronicle Brother Cadfael believes the motive for a callous murder is all too obvious, but he soon learns that when love and money are involved, nothing is straightforward. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
BY REASON OF THE PROLONGED COLD, WHICH LINGERED far into April, and had scarcely mellowed when the month of May began, everything came laggard and reluctant that spring of 1142. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Lovely Book for Incurable romantics! 11 May 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
My Husband reads to me every night before we go to sleep and this book was wonderful! I love stories that have happy endings and where the 'prince' gets his 'princess.' Ellis Peters is a great writer and I enjoy her Cadfael books even more than the T.V. series. Five Stars.
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5.0 out of 5 stars the rose rent 15 Mar 2013
By Cammie
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
I really like ellis peters cadfael and when I was sick and couldn't read to listen to them on my cd player was wonderful especially read by dereck Jacobi.
I would reccomend them to anyone. But I only like them read by Dereck Jacobi, my personal choice.
Cammie
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5.0 out of 5 stars Another Cadfael stunner 30 Jan 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
It has all the ingredients necessary for a gripping read - drama, suspense, a delicate love story. Don't miss it!
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3.0 out of 5 stars Murder for pasion 1 Oct 2009
Format:Paperback
When her husband dies, she bestows one of her houses for a rent of only one single white rose. She is beautiful and rich with many suitors. But which one wants to stop her getting this payment and the house being reverted to her. who is behind this? The house gets violently attacked and a man is found dead there; murdered!!! Brother Cadfael has to sort out this crime of passion through his usual paths of enquiry to unravel the murder mystery.
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5.0 out of 5 stars "A Good read" 10 Aug 2009
Format:Audio Cassette
The Brother Cadfael stories really tell themselves, but I say read because even though I listen to the story, I am still reading but with my mind's eye. This story stand up on it's own, very good detail about how life was at that time, giving the people actual thoughts as well as actions. A insight into how the working man's position was although he was skilled in his trade. Also how women were looked down on, but still had to do any job multi-tasking for women has always been there but it's only recently that it has been reconnised.

Very enjoyable for either gender if a good book is wanted.
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A peppercorn rent paid in roses 3 Dec 2004
Format:Audio Cassette
If you're interested in an audio edition, check that you're getting the unabridged recording narrated by Stephen Thorne. If you're interested in the Derek Jacobi video, I warn you that the BBC rewrote the backstory of both Judith and Niall to make them more melodramatic; as compensation, they came up with one additional clever ploy on the part of the murderer that's worth seeing.

This May of 1142, spring has begun late; winter's prolonged grip has been reflected in human affairs. King Stephen, freed by a prisoner exchange after THE PILGRIM OF HATE, raised the Empress' hopes by falling ill, but her move to Oxford was premature; he's now in fine fettle, picking off the empress' outposts. While these events, and the war at large, have little effect on this story, they'll be relevant in the next book, THE HERMIT OF EYTON FOREST. Cadfael's worries are more immediate, but easing now that the crops have finally been sown and it looks as though the roses will be out by the 22nd of June, the feast of St. Winifred's translation.

The Widow Perle - 25-year-old Judith Vestier that was - lost her husband to a terrible fever four years ago, despite everything Cadfael could do, then lost her only child in miscarriage shortly thereafter. In the depths of her grief, she couldn't bear to stay in the house where they'd been happy, so she deeded the place to the abbey in exchange for an annual rent of one white rose from her favorite rosebush, to be paid into her hand each June 22nd. (As heiress to the Vestier clothier business, Judith has ample property even without the house; she moved in 'over her shop', as it were, with her widowed aunt and her cousin Miles....

Since it pays for the lighting of Mary's altar all year around, brother Eluric - the altar's custodian - has always delivered the rent, but this year brings a small crisis. Eluric, given as an oblate to the abbey as a young child, grew up in the cloister; his annual meetings with Judith have been his first prolonged exposure to any woman. Despite his overly sensitive conscience, the inevitable happened, and he's asked Radulfus to relieve him of the duty since he can't help worshipping Judith from afar. Radulfus, not wanting to embarrass the boy publicly or to have a repetition in a few years' time, consults Cadfael and Anselm; Cadfael suggests that the abbey's tenant, Niall Bronzesmith, deliver the rent directly. After all, he's a widower and a decent man...

Unfortunately, other men of Shrewsbury aren't as innocent as Eluric or as decent as Niall, and seek Judith's hand in marriage for mercenary purposes. Godfrey Fuller, whose business complements Judith's very well, proposes marriage as a business proposition. Her chief weaver, Bertred, has an eye out for advancement. Even ne'er-do-well Vivian Hynde is trying to turn his charm into a soft spot for life. Small wonder that Judith has thoughts of the cloister - or that her aunt is gently nudging her in that direction. Both Cadfael and Sister Magdalen advise Judith against it, although from rather different points of view. :)

Then Brother Eluric is found dead in Niall's garden - not a suicide, as the brothers at first fear, but murdered, stabbed by someone who tried and failed to cut the rosebush down with a hatchet. Judith, calling on Niall to pick up a belt buckle he'd repaired for her, stumbles upon the scene - and when Cadfael tells her why Eluric crept out to see the rosebush one last time, she feels guilty that he suffered so much and she never noticed. Turning it over in her mind, she resolves to go to the abbey in the morning and make the house an outright gift - but the word gets out from her servants' gossip, and the next morning she's kidnapped, by someone who'd rather take a chance on forcing her into a marriage and getting *all* her property instead of only half. (Her cousin Miles is beside himself - getting a new boss like *that* isn't something anyone would want, even without a cousin's safety to worry about.)

My compliments to any reader who deduces what happened to Judith before Peters reveals the solution. Eluric's murder - and another later on - are fair puzzles. (Ever the forensics expert, Cadfael takes a wax impression of a distinctive footprint from the damp earth beside the rosebush, to give the town cobblers a chance of catching Eluric's murderer by the heel, for instance.) Niall Bronzesmith, quiet as he is, has problems of his own; after his wife's death in childbirth, he fostered their daughter with his sister Cecily's cheerful family outside town, since he couldn't take care of a small baby alone, although he loves her very much. She's too little to understand why he only comes for frequent visits, and he needs to arrange to bring her back to live with him before she starts thinking he doesn't want her.

Lovely story. Read more ›

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A serial killer for Brother Cadfael to find 22 Jan 2002
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
In this book, Brother Cadfael will have to find what seems to be a serial killer, a crazy man or woman, who persecutes a rose bush and its owner. The mystery is complete till the end and the love story is one of the most tender and sweet by Ellis Peters since it envolves two deeply hurt people who do not seem to have any hope in the world.
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