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Cover of The dark monk: a hangman's daughter tale

The dark monk: a hangman's daughter tale

โœ Scribed by Oliver Potzsch


Publisher
Mariner Books
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Weight
308 KB
Edition
1st Mariner books ed
Category
Fiction
ISBN
0547807686

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


From Publishers Weekly

The brutality and ignorance of 17th-century Bavaria serves as the backdrop for Pรถtzsch's thrilling second whodunit featuring an unlikely trio of sleuths (after 2011's The Hangman's Daughter). When the parish priest, Andreas Koppmeyer, eats some poisoned doughnuts after sealing up a mysterious something in his church basement, he manages to scratch a mark on the frost covering a gravestone as he expires. Figuring out what that dying clue means and who doctored the pastries falls to Altenstadt hangman Jakob Kuisl; his daughter, Magdalena, an apprentice midwife; and her suitor, Simon Fronwieser, a doctor's son. Fronwieser links a Latin phrase seen in a crypt with the Templars, raising the possibility that Koppmeyer stumbled on a secret relating to that shadowy society. Meanwhile, the depredations of a gang of robbers threaten local commerce. Fans of Michael Gregorio's early 19th-century Prussian series (Unholy Awakening, etc.) will find a lot to enjoy.

From Booklist

Originally published in Germany in 2009, this sequel to The Hangmanโ€™s Daughter begins in January 1660 with the murder of a priest and takes readers on a wild adventure to uncover the secret of a long-hidden (and possibly mythical) treasure of the Knights Templar. Potzsch does an excellent job of plunking the reader down in seventeenth-century Germany; Jakob Kuisl, the town hangman, and his daughter, Magdalena, donโ€™t seem like made-up characters in a fictional landscape but, rather, like real people in a real place (in fact, the Kuisl family of executioners actually existed, and Potzsch is descended from them). The author supplies enough historical detail to give readers a good sense of the time and place but not too much to risk boring them with unnecessary details. Readers will also appreciate the nice balance between drama, suspense, and humor: this is a serious story, Potzsch seems to be saying, but it's OK to have some fun with it. At least two more books in the series are forthcoming, and they will be most welcome.


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โœ Oliver Potzsch;Lee Chadeayne (transl) ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 2010 ๐Ÿ› AmazonCrossing ๐ŸŒ English โš– 1 MB ๐Ÿ‘ 2 views

Germany, 1659: When a dying boy is pulled from the river with a mark crudely tattooed on his shoulder, hangman Jakob Kuisl is called upon to investigate whether witchcraft is at play in his small Bavarian town. Whispers and dark memories of witch trials and the women burned at stake just seventy yea

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