She is a challenge for her
superiors. When she learns her cousin, Lady Margaret Bulmer, is to be burned at
the stake for participating in the northern rebellion against King Henry VIII
she leaves the convent, without permission, determined to provide personal
comfort to Margaret. Her journey is difficult but she reaches the execution
site and manages to throw rosary beads to Margaret.
After her father, Sir Richard
Stafford, unexpectedly intervenes to hasten Margaret’s death Joanna is arrested
and imprisoned in the Tower of London. Her future is grim as few leave the
Tower except to be executed. Officials doubt she had no role in her father’s
action.
Sister Joanna had been a
lady-in-waiting for Queen Katherine, the King’s first wife, and attended her at
the time of her death.
While aggressively questioned,
though never tortured, Sister Joanna maintains her intentions were limited to
aiding a cousin she loved dying a cruel death.
Sister Joanna is unsure why she is
not charged and brought before the Courts until the Bishop of Winchester
arrives and makes a proposition. If she will return to Dartford, search for and
find an ancient crown hidden there he will spare the life of her father.
Unwilling to martyr her father she agrees to the proposal and is returned to
Dartford.
The time she spends in the Tower was
long for me in the book but once she is back at the abbey the story started
flowing for me.
While grateful to be able to resume
her life as a nun, Sister Joanna finds it difficult to lie about her release.
Within the abbey it is a time of
turmoil as King Henry has already dissolved many northern monasteries and is
now turning his attention, through Cromwell, to the southern religious houses.
Will the abbey survive or be forced to close?
Sister Joanna learns of the sacred
nature of the Crown for which she is searching in the abbey. With regard to the
Crown the book has a touch of The DaVinci
Code and The Holy Blood and the Holy
Grail. The history of the Crown is well done.
I appreciated how Bilyeau portrays
the Dominican sisters and their cloistered lives. Where I struggled with how
Louise Penny dealt with monastic life in The
Beautiful Mystery I thought Bilyeau did well in showing how the women loved
God and sought to live good lives together.
There is murder in the book but I
feel setting out the details would give way too much of the story. It becomes a
challenge for Sister Joanna to determine who, in the closed confines of the
abbey, would kill.
The history is very well done
without being obtrusive or overbearing. Sister Joanna is a credible medieval
rather than modern character. Lest readers doubt a woman could have a major
role in that era the book is set in the same century Queen Elizabeth I reigns
over England.
It has been some time since I read a
good historical mystery. Reading The
Crown reminded my how history comes alive in the best historical mysteries.
I thank Marian at the Sleuth of Baker Street Bookstore for recommending the
book to me. I look forward to more mysteries featuring Joanna Stafford. (Jan.
25/13)