
Death of a Scholar
The Twentieth Chronicle of Matthew Bartholomew
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Narrated by:
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David Thorpe
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By:
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Susanna Gregory
In the summer of 1358 the physician Matthew Bartholomew returns to Cambridge to learn that his beloved sister is in mourning after the unexpected death of her husband, Oswald Stanmore. Aware that his son has no interest in the cloth trade that made his fortune and reputation, Oswald has left the business to his widow, but a spate of burglaries in the town distracts Matthew from supporting Edith in her grief and attempting to keep the peace between her and her wayward son.
As well as the theft of irreplaceable items from Michaelhouse, which threatens its very survival, a new foundation, Winwick Hall, is causing consternation amongst Matthew's colleagues. The founder is an impatient man determined that his name will grace the University's most prestigious college. He has used his wealth to rush the construction of the hall, and his appointed Fellows have infiltrated the charitable Guild founded by Stanmore, in order to gain the support of Cambridge's most influential citizens on Winwick's behalf.
A perfect storm between the older establishments and the brash newcomers is brewing when the murder of a leading member of the Guild is soon followed by the death of one of Winwick's senior Fellows. Assisting Brother Michael in investigating these fatalities leads Matthew into a web of suspicion, where conspiracy theories are rife but facts are scarce and where the pressure from the problems of his college and his family sets him on a path that could endanger his own future ...
©2014 Susanna Gregory (P)2014 SoundingsListeners also enjoyed...




















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I read the whole series and can't recall the specifics of this one.
narrator was good and fit the book.
good. historical mystery in English monasteries
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Why has the narrated changed his characters
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Good job by David Thorpe but voices have changed!
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The plot however was really great, one of the best in the series, I thought.
Voices changed in this book
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My only issue is that there aren't more of these..
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Still I love these books and am happy when I see David’s name as narrator.
Changed character voices, loved the story though
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As always, the plot of the novel is overly convoluted. It's as if Susanna Gregory worries that her readers/listeners might not feel they are getting their money's worth, so she throws in ever more dead bodies. It is impossible to keep track of them all, so I don't try. I just wait for Michael and Matt to do one of their occasional plot summaries. Although at about a dozen corpses a book, by book 20 it's amazing anyone in small-town Cambridge c. 1358 is left. The period detail is fascinating, especially learning how paltry and downright dangerous food and water were in the middle ages. Of course, the dialog is purely 20th century English, so period authenticity only goes so far.
All the Voices Have Changed
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that were narrated by another narrator other than Thorpe, because it was so odd to hear the characters in radically different voices. I will try the next in the series to see if the producers and narrator came to their senses and went back to original voices. If not, I’m done with this series.
What happened to the voices
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