
Falconer and the Ritual of Death
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Narrated by:
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Gordon Griffin
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By:
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Ian Morson
About this listen
Regent Master William Falconer deduces that the body was hidden 20 years ago. He must rack his brains to recall significant events in Oxford during that decade, when England was involved in an earlier Crusade and the apparent ritual murder of a child shocked the community. Could this provide a solution to the case?
As the heavens open, and Oxford is threatened with flooding, Falconer is drawn into violent events where the past and the present collide with startling consequences...
©2009 Ian Morson (P)2009 SoundingsInteresting
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Last hour missing Good Book but unifinished
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Unfinished
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This is otherwise a great book!
Also Reported Incomplete Book
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Yet Griffin didn’t show this tendency with City of the Dead. Maybe Morson likes comas.
In the end the reading wasn’t able to bring me to care enough to finish; I had persevered for 6 of the 8 hours.
I enjoyed City of the Dead, so don’t dismiss Morson or Griffin, but be ready to give up if either can’t keep the narrative going interestingly; a bit of an up hill battle if Morson reuses Falconer. As in the other book, he does a good job of making the times clearly understood; squaller, mud, poverty, etc. Maybe he over does it a bit … mud, mud, mud … but maybe that was down to the comas; running sentences on would have made it less persistent.
The story stands on its own if it becomes part of a series. The plot idea is an intriguing one; it is a shame it wasn’t given a little more support.
If you don’t find the short phrasing a problem and wish a lite listen where nothing intellectually demanding is required, this might pass the time sufficiently well; even if in the end I was too disappointed to finish.
Potential not realised
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unfinished
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