Tag Archives: Middle Ages

Gareth and Gwen Medieval Mysteries, by Sarah Woodbury

I purchased these as an audiobook bundle from Chirp, which has become my new favorite source for audiobooks. I don’t usually promote platforms here, and I would typically unsubscribe from an app that sent me daily e-mails. But Chirp offers books for $2-$4 that would normally cost as much at ten times that. The wide variety of genres includes classics as well as contemporary fiction and nonfiction, both traditionally and self-published. I can scan the offerings in less than thirty seconds and delete the promo if there’s nothing I want.

But enough free advertising–back to Gareth and Gwen. In the beginning, I almost gave up on these books on account of the author’s extensive knowledge of medieval Wales and its neighbors. This corner of history is entirely new to me, which doesn’t make it an ideal subject for audio absorption–I frequently found myself wishing for a print copy. Nevertheless, Sarah Woodbury somehow manages to forefront the well-crafted mystery in such a way that, while the historical background is integral to the plot, I don’t have to have a perfect handle on it to engage with the characters or grasp the solution. It’s ingenious plotting, and I’m not entirely sure how she pulled it off. I started out feeling awash in details but gradually got my bearings and found I was able to navigate the sea of royals and alliances without too much confusion.

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A History of the Island, by Eugene Vodolazkin

Eugene Vodolazkin’s Laurus sat on my shelf for a number of years after a friend gave it to me. During that time I loaned it out at least once, my neglect being no testament to my valuation of it. On the contrary, I suspected it of being highly affecting on account of both craftsmanship and realistic representations of its fifteenth-century protagonist. But the travails of even a fictional saint seemed too much to traverse during a stretch of life that encompassed (sequentially, thank goodness, not all at once) a mother-in-law with dementia, a worldwide pandemic, and a husband with cancer, not to mention a daughter in middle school.

At length, however, advance notice of the impending publication of Vodolazkin’s A History of the Island prompted me to pick up Laurus. While the 2023 book is not a sequel to Laurus, I wanted to be familiar with the author’s earlier work before taking on the new one.

I discovered that while Laurus does engage weighty themes, the author’s wit and the protagonist’s (often implausibly) transcendent state of mind prevent the latter’s trials from overburdening those of us who trudge vicariously alongside him. The setting is our world, but it’s a half-mythic world, where signs and wonders are commonplace. Surreal elements extract the action from the realm of the literal into a space where I, at least, could observe and reflect from a certain remove.

I ended up reading A History for our mother-daughter book when we were assigned to select a book with an unusual narrative style. A History qualifies on many levels. It reads like the history book it purports to be, but the narrative is interspersed with commentary by the centuries-old monarchs of said island.

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