I enjoy a good read that allows me to escape into the turbulent history of the past. If the author can do that without bogging me down with lots of detail even better. Vagabond continues the suspended suspense created with of The Archer's Tale.
I thought the book was going to be lukewarm at first; a repertoire of character confessions of individual hardship in medieval England. I had this jigsaw puzzle before me, a lot of pieces that were recognizable but how they would be constructed into a story, indefinable. And then this magical, mystical piece popped out of the pages and I could complete the book. It was the way Cornwell weaves historical fact within his basic idea into his concept; the vainness of war, vengeance, ambition, obsession and absolution. I realized I was thinking too much and not allowing the words to delineate the story. The futility, trials and triumphs in mans quest for the grail and finding redemption. Here was the vivid portrayal of what I gleamed from countless historical references in my studies and travels throughout England and Scotland.
The smoke began to clear with the poignant depiction of de Taillebourg, the French Monk, and his devotion to his faith as he beat his own skull against granite rock. As the story unfolds his apparent spirituality shrouds an insane lust for power. I loved the distressing tension of the English, including the main character, Thomas, scrambling for absolution before entering into battle against the marauding Scots. I felt like one of the bystanders jockeying for position to witness the carnage as steel clashed against steel, arrows found their mark, and men breathed their last breath of life. And the internal conflict of Thomas as his quest for the spiritual object unmasks a quest for his own redemption and affirmation of his own faith and existence.
The book is a bit of a challenge but well worth the patience. Satisfaction is attained from savouring every encounter. Cornwell knows his characters and the period in which they existed. He hasn't tempted the reader too soon with action but brews the kettle slowly. Conflict increases throughout and leaves us hanging for more. He has bettered himself with this second instalment. I'm looking forward to the next.