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Paul Doherty

  • Ann Dukthas
21 septembre 1946
Paul Doherty
Dark Serpent (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 18)
The Slayers of Seth
Sous le masque de Rê
Grands détectives: La Galerie du rossignol
Les baladins du régent
Meurtres au nom d'Horus
  • Meurtres au nom d'Horus

    • 283pages
    • 10 heures de lecture

    En 1479 avant J.-C., à Thèbes, la reine Hatchepsout a vingt ans et s’apprête à devenir la première femme pharaon d’Égypte. Intelligente et ambitieuse, elle a vaincu tous ses ennemis, cependant elle doit encore obtenir le soutien des grands prêtres pour porter le titre et les insignes du dieu Pharaon... Alors que les présages semblaient en sa faveur, deux crimes odieux sont commis au coeur même du temple d’Horus, un des lieux les plus sacrés du royaume. Amerotkê, juge principal de Thèbes et ami de la reine, mène l’enquête avec l’aide de l’effronté Shoufoy, son fidèle serviteur. Le destin d’Hatchepsout est entre ses mains, mais face à un lion mangeur d’hommes, un mystérieux labyrinthe caché en plein désert et une guilde d’assassins, Amerotkê aura autant besoin de son courage que de l’aide des dieux...

    Meurtres au nom d'Horus
    4,4
  • Les baladins du régent

    • 350pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    Paul Doherty est né à Middlesbrough, dans le Yorkshire. Il est l'auteur de plusieurs séries historico-policières, dont notamment : les enquêtes de frère Athelstan, un dominicain du XIIIe siècle ; les enquêtes de Hugh Corbett, espion du roi Édouard Ier ; et celles d'Amerotkê, juge dans l'Égypte du XVe siècle avant J.-C.. Il est aujourd'hui professeur d'histoire médiévale.

    Les baladins du régent
    3,7
  • It is 1376, and the famed Black Prince has died of a terrible rotting sickness, closely followed by his father, King Edward III. The crown of England is now left in the hands of a mere boy—the future Richard II—and the great nobles have gathered like hungry wolves around the empty throne. A terrible power struggle threatens the country, and one of London's powerful merchant princes is foully murdered within a few days of Edward’s death. Coroner Sir John Cranston and Dominican monk Brother Athelstan are ordered to investigate, and the body count begins to rise, Cranston and Athelstan are drawn ever deeper into a dark web of intrigue.

    Grands détectives: La Galerie du rossignol
    2,0
  • Sous le masque de Rê

    • 286pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    Pharaon est mort ! Touthmôsis, de retour à Thèbes à l'issue d'une campagne militaire, s'est effondré dans les bras d'Hatchepsout, son épouse... Une mort mystérieuse, peut-être due à là morsure d'un serpent. Dans un souffle, le moribond a eu le temps de lâcher : "Un masque... Ce n'est qu'un masque..." Que signifient ces ultimes paroles ? Dans la salle des Deux Vérités du temple de Maât, quelques mois plus tard, le juge en chef Amerotkê est saisi d'une étrange affaire de viol de sépultures dans la cité des Morts. Se pourrait-il que ces effractions soient liées au trépas de Pharaon, que la reine Hatchepsout adjure le juge d'élucider ? Alors que le trône d'Égypte est la proie d'une crise de succession, l'enquête d'Amerotkê et de son scribe Prenhoe les conduira jusqu'aux pyramides de Sakkara, sur la piste du masque de Rê...

    Sous le masque de Rê
    3,8
  • The Slayers of Seth

    • 288pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    Lord Amerotke, Pharaoh's Chief Judge, is already in the middle of a murder case when it seems that there is another grave murder to investigate. One of Egypt's great heroes has been brutally killed and Pharaoh Hatusu herself has decided to intervene. She believes that General Balet's murder is only the beginning and she calls on Judge Amerotke for help. There is more to link the deaths than originally meets the eye - but can Amerotke track down the killer before he strikes again?

    The Slayers of Seth
    4,6
  • Paul Doherty's most popular series character returns. It is the Summer of 1311 and Hugh Corbett is about to take up a life of danger again in the eighteenth novel in his series, DARK SERPENT, the follow up to THE MYSTERIUM. If you love historical mysteries from Robin Hobb, Susanna Gregory, Michael Jecks, Peter Tremayne and Bernard Knight you will love this.

    Dark Serpent (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 18)
    4,6
  • Paul Doherty's brilliant new Amerotke novel will take you on a compelling journey into the glory, splendour and corruption of Ancient Egypt. 1477 BC and once again treacherous forces are on the rise in Egypt. Fresh from her victories in the north, Pharaoh Queen Hatusu has returned to Thebes to find sinister threats emerging from neighbouring province Nubia. The Arites, a secret murderous sect, are waging bloody war against the Pharaoh. Imperial messengers and members of the Medjay, Egypt's elite army, are disappearing around the Oasis of Sinjar and now Imothep, formerly chief scout for the Spies of Sobeck, has been found strangled in a fortified room at his mansion. The Arites are on the hunt. Will Amerotke, Chief Judge of the Hall of Two Truths, be able to confront this boiling mist of murder and treason, and save Hatusu, before Egypt is overrun by its menacing and dangerous underworld?

    The Spies of Sobeck
    4,5
  • A medieval mystery featuring sleuthing monk Brother Athelstan" May, 1381. The Great Revolt draws ever nearer. The Upright Men openly roam the streets of London, waiting for the violence to begin. Their mysterious envoy, the Herald of Hell, appears at night all over the city, striking terror into the hearts of those who oppose them. But who is he? When his chancery clerk is found hanged in a notorious Southwark brothel, the ruthless Thibault, John of Gaunt s Master of Secrets, summons Brother Athelstan to investigate. Did Amaury Whitfield really kill himself following a visit from the terrifying Herald of Hell? Athelstan is unconvinced. In the dead man s possession was a manuscript containing a great secret which he had been striving to decipher. If he could only unlock the cipher and interpret the messages being carried to the so-called Herald of Hell, Athelstan would be one step closer to catching the killer. But can he crack the code before the Great Revolt begins?

    A Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery: Herald of Hell
    4,6
  • An Evil Spirit Out of the West

    • 608pages
    • 22 heures de lecture

    Known as the Veiled One, the ugly and deformed Akenhaten is a shadowy figure. As a child he was overlooked and despised by his own father, but as an adult he is thrust into the political limelight when his elder brother dies. Mahu, ambitious and ruthless, watches the young prince carve his path to power. He becomes Akenhaten’s protector and confidant and stands by as Akenhaten proclaims that there is only one God and that he is that God’s only son. Revolution and chaos ensure in a dramatic reign filled with fraud, abduction, assassination, betrayal, and treachery. When Mahu becomes suspicious of Akenhaten’s majestic and glorious wife Nefertiti and the political skill of her brother Ay, he suspects that a hidden and malign influence may have placed Akenhaten’s life in grave peril.

    An Evil Spirit Out of the West
    4,4
  • A Pilgrimage to Murder

    • 240pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    Brother Athelstan's Canterbury pilgrimage is disrupted by brutal murder in the latest absorbing medieval mystery. Summer, 1381. The Great Revolt has been crushed; the king's peace ruthlessly enforced. Brother Athelstan meanwhile is preparing for a pilgrimage to St Thomas a Becket's shrine in Canterbury to give thanks for the wellbeing of his congregation after the violent rebellion. But preparations are disrupted when Athelstan is summoned to a modest house in Cheapside, scene of a brutal triple murder. One of the victims was the chief clerk of the Secret Chancery of John of Gaunt. Could this be an act of revenge by the Upright Men, those rebels who survived the Great Revolt? At the same time Athelstan is receiving menacing messages from an assassin who calls himself Azrael, the Angel of Death? Who is he - and why is he targeting a harmless friar? Could Athelstan's pilgrimage be leading him into a deadly trap?

    A Pilgrimage to Murder
    4,4
  • Realm of Darkness (Hugh Corbett 23)

    • 352pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    Paul Doherty's twenty-third enthralling medieval mystery is sure to appeal to fans of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell and Bernard Cornwell.

    Realm of Darkness (Hugh Corbett 23)
    4,3
  • Unlocking the Metaverse

    • 144pages
    • 6 heures de lecture

    This highly comprehensive resource offers insights into leveraging the Metaverse and digital worlds for business success. It emphasizes strategic implementation and execution of Metaverse strategies, technologies, and innovations, equipping readers with real-world tools to meet market demands. The text clearly defines the Metaverse and its value for readers and their companies. Engagement with readers occurs through the book’s virtual world, facilitating structured and unstructured interactions with the qualified author and guests during ongoing public events. This creates a repository for continuous learning and a sandbox for exploring and analyzing innovations. Key topics covered include construction documents and drawings, building information modeling (BIM), digital twins, and engagement measures. The evolving role of specifications is discussed, focusing on specification manuals, lifecycle, 3D geolocation specs, and 3D search. Additionally, smart contracts and tokenomics are explored, including blockchain, NFTs, fractionalized ownership, and digital real estate. Future outlooks on machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) highlight their applications in gaming and robotics. This authoritative coverage of a rapidly evolving industry makes it an essential resource for architects, engineers, contractors, facility managers, and property owners seeking to harness new technologies for business success.

    Unlocking the Metaverse
    5,0
  • Brother Athelstan: Bloodstone

    A Mediaeval Mystery

    • 233pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    "December, 1380. When the corpse of Sir Robert Kilverby, a wealthy Cheapside merchant is discovered in a locked room, Brother Athelstan accompanies the King's coroner to investigate. For the late Sir Robert had in his possession a priceless relic, a sacred bloodstone which he was planning to donate to the Abbey of St Fulcher-on-Thames. The bloodstone has disappeared and the Regent, John of Gaunt, who covets the relic for himself, is taking an uncomfortably close interest in the case."--Jacket.

    Brother Athelstan: Bloodstone
    4,0
  • Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery - 16: The Great Revolt

    A Mystery Set in Medieval London - Large Print

    • 336pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    Sleuthing monk Brother Athelstan discovers that past crimes can cause new murder in the latest intriguing medieval mystery June, 1381. The rebel armies are massed outside London, determined to overturn both Crown and Church. The Regent, John of Gaunt, has headed north, leaving his nephew, the boy-king Richard II, unprotected. Brother Athelstan meanwhile has been summoned to the monastery at Blackfriars, tasked with solving the murder of his fellow priest, Brother Alberic, found stabbed to death in his locked chamber. Athelstan would rather be protecting his parishioners at St Erconwald's. Instead, he finds himself investigating a royal murder that took place fifty-four years earlier whilst the rebel leaders plot the present king's destruction. What does the fate of the king's great-grandfather, Edward II, have to do with the murder of Brother Alberic more than fifty years later? When he finds his own life under threat, Athelstan discovers that exposing past secrets can lead to present danger.

    Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery - 16: The Great Revolt
    4,0
  • Brother Athelstan: The Straw Men

    A Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery

    • 224pages
    • 8 heures de lecture

    January, 1381. As guests of the Regent, John of Gaunt, Brother Athelstan and Sir John Cranston have been attending a mystery play performed by the Straw Men, Gaunt's personal acting troupe, in St John's Chapel in the Tower of London when the evening's entertainment is rudely interrupted by sudden, violent death.

    Brother Athelstan: The Straw Men
    4,0
  • The Great Crown Jewels Robbery of 1303

    The Extraordinary Story of the First Big Bank Raid in History

    • 288pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    During the reign of King Charles II, Colonel Blood famously attempted to steal the crown jewels, but this was not the first plot of its kind. Three centuries earlier, in 1303, Edward I of England was focused on subduing William Wallace while his royal treasures were secured behind iron doors in Westminster Abbey, a revered site inhabited by Benedictine monks. Enter Richard Puddlicott, a charming rogue and former merchant with a vendetta against the king. He cleverly infiltrated the Abbey's inner circle, entertaining the monks with their own silver, and managed to pilfer a significant portion of the treasure. The King's outrage was immense, yet Puddlicott evaded capture for a time, leading the King's men on a wild chase before ultimately being caught and sentenced to death alongside forty monks in Westminster. This thrilling narrative, filled with cunning, deceit, and the colorful lives of monks, pimps, and prostitutes, recounts the first great bank raid in history. Until now, little has been documented about this event, much of the evidence remaining in manuscripts written in Latin or Norman French. Paul Doherty masterfully blends vivid storytelling with historical analysis, revealing the medieval underworld and the complexities of the monastic community, resulting in an enlightening and captivating read.

    The Great Crown Jewels Robbery of 1303
    4,0
  • Murder Most Treasonable

    • 336pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    Friar-sleuth Brother Athelstan is summoned to investigate the suspicious deaths of two clerks who work for John of Gaunt's sinister Master of Secrets. If it was murder, how did the killer breach a maze of locked doors without a trace? Athelstan must uncover the truth in this gripping historical mystery set in medieval London.

    Murder Most Treasonable
    4,2
  • Murder's Immortal Mask

    • 373pages
    • 14 heures de lecture

    In the fourth novel of Paul Doherty's Ancient Roman series, Claudia, the secret agent of Empress Helena, faces a killer who is stalking the streets of Rome.

    Murder's Immortal Mask
    4,2
  • Murder's Snare

    • 224pages
    • 8 heures de lecture

    Set in medieval London, this gripping historical mystery follows Brother Athelstan as he investigates a series of brutal murders linked to the Free Company of the Via Crucis. The narrative unfolds against a backdrop of political tension in 1382, with victims who were once part of the notorious group. As Athelstan collaborates with Coroner Cranston, they face a complex web of clues that could determine the fate of the nation. The story promises intricate plotting and rich historical detail, appealing to fans of C.J. Sansom.

    Murder's Snare
    4,1
  • In autumn 1379, the power of the British crown is invested in John of Gaunt, and the kingdom is seething with discontent. The French are attacking the southern ports and peasants are planning a revolt organized by a mysterious leader who proclaims himself “IRA DEI,” the anger of God. Meanwhile Gaunt's tenuous plans are plunged into chaos by a series of bloody murders in London. In desperation, Gaunt turns to Sir John Cranston to catch the killer and recover a vanished king’s ransom in gold. Together with his ally Brother Athelstan, Cranston must face threats from the most powerful classes as well as attacks from the seedy underworld—along with a chilling exorcism—in order to bring a subtle murderer to justice.

    The Anger of God
    4,2
  • Mother Midnight (Hugh Corbett 22)

    • 352pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    It is 1312 and, with Westminster in turmoil and the Kingdom edging towards civil war, Sir Hugh Corbett is drawn into a web of murder. Paul Doherty's twenty-second enthralling medieval mystery is sure to appeal to fans of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell and Bernard Cornwell.

    Mother Midnight (Hugh Corbett 22)
    4,0
  • By Murder's Bright Light

    • 304pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    Scandal, murder and treason... Athelstan and Cranston are back with a bang.Winter, 1379. French privateers are attacking the southern coast and threaten London itself, the very heart of the nation.The situation becomes dire when an English flotilla of warships, with the colossal God's Bright Light among them, drops anchor in the Thames; during the first night, the entire watch of the ship disappears without a trace. The series of murderous and strange incidents leads to Sir John and Brother Athelstan being summoned to resolve the mysteries on board the ill-omened warship. Their investigations uncover some shocking truths - and they find themselves in the thick of a bloody battle on the Thames

    By Murder's Bright Light
    4,2
  • The House of Crows

    • 304pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    A brutal murderer, a house of assassins, a devil incarnate...It's the Spring of 1380 and the Regent John of Gaunt needs money and supplies for his war against the French.Unfortunately, the members of parliament at Westminster are proving especially stubborn - and the Regent's cause is not aided when some representatives from the shire of Shrewsbury are foully murdered.John of Gaunt orders Sir John Cranston, along with his trusty ally Brother Athelstan, to find the assassin before he loses every chance of obtaining the taxes he requires, before more innocent people are found dead

    The House of Crows
    4,2
  • The Devil's Domain

    • 245pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    The eighth gripping book in Paul Doherty's superb Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan series

    The Devil's Domain
    4,2
  • The Assassin's Riddle

    • 304pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    The only way to win this murderer's deadly game... is to play along.Summer, 1380. Brutal and sudden death is not uncommon in the foul alleys and streets of London. The corpse of a clerk has been pulled from the Thames. They drowned, but not before receiving a vicious blow to the back of the head.Then Bartholomew Drayton, a usurer and money-lender, is found dead in his strongroom, a crossbow bolt firmly embedded in his chest: a real mystery because the windowless strongroom was locked and barred from the inside. So who killed him? And how? And are the deaths connected?Sir John Cranston comes to survey the scene. When other clerks are murdered, each with a riddle pinned to his corpse, Cranston enlists the help of Brother Athelstan - and together they must pit their wits against a deadly adversary bent on murder and mayhem.Another thrilling historical mystery from a true master of the genre, perfect for fans of S. G. MacLean, S. J. Parris and C. J. Sansom.

    The Assassin's Riddle
    4,0
  • Murder Most Holy

    • 304pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    Summer, 1379. Sir John Cranston, coroner of the city of London, is trapped into a wager with Signor Gian Galeazzo, Lord of Cremona, when challenged to resolve a certain murder mystery within two weeks. Men have been found dead in the scarlet chamber of one of Cremona's manors. They have no mark upon them; they have neither drunk nor eaten poison; there are no secret passageways or entrances to the room. And they all have an awful expression of terror upon their faces. Realising his reputation and future wealth rest upon the solving of this mystery, Cranston seeks the help of his faithful secretarius, Brother Athelstan.

    Murder Most Holy
    4,1
  • The Darkening Glass

    • 305pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    The third novel in Paul Doherty's captivating series follows Mathilde of Westminster, a physician and lady-in-waiting to Queen Isabella.

    The Darkening Glass
    4,0
  • Death's Dark Valley (Hugh Corbett 20)

    • 352pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    Murder and mayhem prowl the highways and coffin paths of Medieval England... The dramatic and gripping twentieth novel in the much-loved Hugh Corbett series by Paul Doherty. A dark, medieval mystery perfect for readers of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell and Bernard Cornwell.

    Death's Dark Valley (Hugh Corbett 20)
    4,1
  • "A series of grisly deaths are linked to the sacred Stone of Scone in this compelling medieval mystery featuring friar-sleuth Brother Athelstan. This abbey is a strange place, Brother Athelstan. A hall of ghosts, a place of flitting shadows. The dead throng here. I can hear them whispering as they ride the air. During the harsh winter of 1381 murder stalks the streets of London in all its grisly forms. The city's prostitutes are falling prey to a silent, deadly assassin known as The Flayer who carefully peels his victims' skins for his collection. At the same time, Westminster Abbey, which houses the sacred Stone of Scone, is plagued by a series of hideous poisonings. Could there be a connection between these brutally violent deaths and the stone, which the English crown cherishes as a symbol of its rule over Scotland? Then there are the two former Upright Men, leaders of the Great Revolt, who are found mysteriously hanged in the Piebald Tavern, close to Brother Athelstan's parish church of St Erconwald - and Athelstan is faced with his most baffling investigation to date. Can he navigate this deadly maze of murder and intrigue and pull the various threads together?"--Provided by publisher.

    The Stone of Destiny
    4,1
  • The House of Shadows

    • 352pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    In the late autumn of 1380, Brother Athelstan and his parish council are busy preparing for the annual Christmas mystery play when two young whores are found slain at a Southwark tavern. Their deaths are only the beginning of a series of gruesome killings which occur around the parish of St. Erconwald and the Knights of the Golden Falcon, who assemble to celebrate their annual reunion. Brother Athelstan and Sir John Cranston must resolve not only the various grizzly deaths but also their source: the Great Robbery of the Lombard treasure which occurred in Southwark some 20 years earlier.

    The House of Shadows
    4,1
  • The Field of Blood

    • 304pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    After the discovery of three savagely murdered bodies in his parish, Brother Athelstan finds himself involved in the hunt for a dangerous killer. It is clear that two of the victims, a whore and a preacher, surprised an assassin who was then forced to kill them. But who the third victim is, and why someone has gone to so much trouble to kill him, remains a mystery. And can it really have any connection with Sir John Cranston’s attempt to save a women unjustly accused of stabbing a clerk?

    The Field of Blood
    4,1
  • Brother Athelstan Medieval Mysteries - 13: Candle Flame

    A Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery

    • 240pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    February, 1381. Splendid Southwark tavern, The Candle-Flame, is the site of a brutal massacre in which nine people, including John of Gaunt's tax collectors, their military escort and the prostitutes entertaining them, are murdered. The furious Regent orders Brother Athelstan to track down the culprits.

    Brother Athelstan Medieval Mysteries - 13: Candle Flame
    3,4
  • The Mansions of Murder

    A Brother Athelstan Medieval Mystery

    • 240pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    Brother Athelstan is summoned to Queenhithe to investigate the murder of a priest who has been found stabbed to death inside his own locked church. Other disturbing discoveries include an empty coffin and a ransacked money chest. Who would commit murder inside a holy church - and steal treasure belonging to the most feared gangleader in London?

    The Mansions of Murder
    4,1
  • Nightshade

    • 320pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    January 1304 and Hugh Corbett, devoted emissary of King Edward I, has been charged with yet another dangerous mission. Scrope, an unscrupulous manor lord, has reneged on his promise to hand over a priceless ornate cross he stole from the Templars during the Crusades. Furthermore, he has massacred as heretics fourteen members of a religious order, whose corpses now hang in the woods near Mistleham in Essex. The King, determined to restore order sends Corbett to Mistleham in his stead.But as Corbett reaches the troubled village, it becomes obvious that the situation has worsened. A mysterious bowman has appeared, killing townspeople at random. Is one of the Brethren responsible, or have the Templars arrived to wreak revenge? Can Corbett restore Mistleham to peace, and return the treasure to the King, before further blood is shed?

    Nightshade
    4,0
  • England, 1311. In the dark of the North the devil lies in wait... The gripping nineteenth novel in the ever-popular Hugh Corbett series by Paul Doherty. A dramatic medieval mystery not to be missed by readers of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell and Bernard Cornwell.

    Devil's Wolf (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 19)
    4,1
  • London, 1382. The Crown's treasury, the most secure chamber in the kingdom, has been robbed, and the five guards brutally killed. Brother Athelstan is set to investigate, but he has problems of his own. A body is found in the nave of his parish church, identified as a craftsman who fashioned the complex locks to the royal treasure chamber . . .

    The Hanging Tree
    4,0
  • The Prince of Darkness

    • 256pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    It is 1301 and a fragile peace exists between Edward of England and Philip IV of France. In the fetid alleys and slums of London and Paris it is a different matter. Here the secret agents of both countries still fight their own, silent, deadly battles. The Prince of Wales wallows in luxury under the sinister influence of his favourite, Gaveston, who has secret political ambitions to dominate the young prince and the English crown. These scandals are threatened with exposure when Lady Belmont, the prince's former mistress, is found dead, her neck broken, at the foot of a nunnery's steps. Was it suicide? An accident? Or malicious murder? Edward turns to his master spy, Hugh Corbett, to solve the mystery. In doing so, Corbett must face the deadly rivalry of his French counterpart, the murderous rage of Gaveston and the silent threats of assassins. He must also contend with the lies and silken deceits of his own master.

    The Prince of Darkness
    4,1
  • The House of the Red Slayer

    • 288pages
    • 11 heures de lecture

    In December 1377 a great frost has the city in its icy grip; even the Thames is frozen from bank to bank. Murder, revenge and treachery also make their presence felt. The Constable of the Tower of London, Sir Ralph Whitton, is found murdered in a cold bleak chamber in the North Bastion. The door is still locked from the inside and guarded by trusted retainers - so how did the assassins slip across a frozen moat and climb the sheer wall to commit such a dreadful crime? Athelstan and Sir John Cranston, the wine-loving coroner of the city of London, are appointed to investigate these mysteries. They soon discover Sir Ralph's murder is only the first in a series of macabre killings which have their roots in a terrible act of betrayal committed many years previously.

    The House of the Red Slayer
    4,1
  • The Rose Demon

    • 502pages
    • 18 heures de lecture

    Matthias Fitzosbert is the illegitimate son of the parish priest of the village of Sutton Courteny. Despite the recent spate of murders, each day he braves the dark woods to visit his friend, a mysterious hermit who shows him many strange and beautiful things. Though enthralled, the boy is always puzzled by his lessons with the hermit - never more so than the night the villagers hunt the hermit down, and burn him, believing him to be responsible for the many deaths. THE ROSE DEMON explores Matthias's unique relationship with a spirit he strives to placate but ultimately flees from. His story is played out against the vivid panorama of medieval life: the fall and sack of Constantinople; the turbulent Wars of the Roses; the terror of witchcraft; the battlefields of Spain and finally the lush jungles of the Caribbean where the Rose Demon and Matthias have one final, dramatic confrontation.

    The Rose Demon
    4,0
  • Hymn to Murder (Hugh Corbett 21)

    • 384pages
    • 14 heures de lecture

    The shadows around the English Crown grow ever darker in the twenty-first instalment of the much-loved Hugh Corbett series by Paul Doherty. An enthralling medieval mystery not to be missed by fans of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell and Bernard Cornwell.

    Hymn to Murder (Hugh Corbett 21)
    3,9
  • The Anubis Slayings

    • 320pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    Hatusu, the remarkable young widow of Pharaoh Tuthmosis II, has forced Egyptian society to acknowledge her as Pharaoh, and her success in battle is spreading Egypt's glory well beyond its frontiers. In the Temple of Anubis, Hatusu and the defeated King Tushratta of Mitanni are negotiating a peace treaty that will seal her greatest victory. But then two hideous murders in the temple and the theft of the Glory of Anubis threaten the tentative truce, and the respected judge Amerotke must find the perpetrators.

    The Anubis Slayings
    4,0
  • February, 1381. A ruthless killer is known as the Ignifer - Fire Bringer - is rampaging through London, bringing agonizing death and destruction in his wake. He appears to be targeting all those involved in the recent trial and conviction of the beautiful Lady Isolda Beaumont, burned at the stake for the murder of her husband. As the late Sir Walter Beaumont was a close friend of the Regent, John of Gaunt orders Sir John Cranston and Brother Athelstan to investigate.

    Brother Athelstan Medieval Mysteries - 14: The Book of Fires
    4,0
  • The Devil's Hunt

    • 256pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    The tenth masterly novel in Paul Doherty's wonderful Hugh Corbett series

    The Devil's Hunt
    3,9
  • Banners of Hell

    Hugh Corbett 24

    • 352pages
    • 13 heures de lecture

    Set in the medieval period, this gripping mystery by Paul Doherty is crafted to captivate readers who enjoy the works of C. J. Sansom, E. M. Powell, and Bernard Cornwell. It promises a blend of historical intrigue and compelling narrative that will keep fans of the genre engaged.

    Banners of Hell
    3,3
  • In the third novel of the Hugh Corbett series, he must find a spy who will stop at nothing, not even murder, to keep his identity secret

    Spy in Chancery (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 3)
    4,0
  • In the fourth thrilling novel in the series, medieval sleuth Hugh Corbett must discover how a man can be murdered in full view of the king and most of the notables of England

    The Angel of Death (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 4)
    4,0
  • Set in a snow-beseiged castle where secret knowledge is the prize and human life the price to be paid, THE MAGICIAN'S DEATH is the fourteenth in the stunning Hugh Corbett series

    The Magician's Death (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 14)
    4,0
  • The Poisoner of Ptah

    • 320pages
    • 12 heures de lecture

    A new novel of murder in the reign of Pharoah Hatusu featuring Judge Amerotke as the crime-solver. At a peace treaty signing between Egypt and Libya in Thebes, three of Egypt's leading scribes die violently on the Temple forecourt, the victims of a vile poisoning. To add to the mounting unease, a prosperous merchant and his young wife are found drowned. Rumours soon sweep the imperial city. The Poisoner of Ptah has returned. It falls to Amerotke, Chief Judge of the Halls of Two Truths, to investigate these hideous crimes - his hunt for the Poisoner leads him to discover yet more suspicion and potential danger. This story sees the Judge pit his wits against a cunning opponent who seems intent on spreading his death-dealing powders. Amerotke enters the twilight world of glorious Thebes where life can be so rich and yet death so swift and brutal.

    The Poisoner of Ptah
    4,0
  • Dark Queen Wary

    • 224pages
    • 8 heures de lecture

    When Margaret Beaufort is invited to George Neville's beautiful home 'The Moor' to investigate some gruesome murders she knows dark forces are at play. She suspects there is a link to the fateful battle of Barnet and the murderer who seems relentless in his thirst for blood. She must tread carefully in this dangerous game of kings!

    Dark Queen Wary
    3,8
  • Crown in Darkness

    • 187pages
    • 7 heures de lecture

    1286 and on a storm-ridden night King Alexander III of Scotland is riding across the Firth of Forth to meet his beautiful French bride Yolande. He never reaches his final destination as his horse mysteriously slips, sending them both crashing to their death on cruel rocks. The Scottish throne is left vacant of any real heir and immediately the great European princes and the powerful nobles of Alexander's kingdom start fighting for the glittering prize. The Chancellor of England, Burnell, ever mindful of the interest his king, Edward I, has in Scotland, sends his faithful clerk, Hugh Corbett, to report on the chaotic situation at the Scottish court. Concerned that a connection exists between the king's death and those now desirous of taking the Scottish throne, Corbett is drawn into a maelstrom of intrigue, conspiracy and danger.

    Crown in Darkness
    3,9
  • The White Rose Murders

    • 256pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    In 1517 the English armies have defeated and killed James IV of Scotland at Flodden and James's widow-queen, Margaret, sister to Henry VIII, has fled to England, leaving her crown under a Council of Regency.Roger Shallot is drawn into a web of mystery and murder by his close friendship with Benjamin Daunbey, the nephew of Cardinal Wolsey, first minister of Henry VIII. Benjamin and Roger are ordered into Margaret's household to resolve certain mysteries as well as to bring about her restoration to Scotland.They begin by questioning Selkirk, a half-mad physician imprisoned in the Tower. He is subsequently found poisoned in a locked chamber guarded by soldiers. The only clue is a poem of riddles. However, the poem contains the seeds for other gruesome murders. The faceless assassin always leaves a white rose, the mark of Les Blancs Sangliers, a secret society plotting the overthrow of the Tudor monarchy...This novel was previously published under the pseudonym Michael Clynes.

    The White Rose Murders
    3,9
  • The Mysterium

    • 384pages
    • 14 heures de lecture

    The seventeenth installment in Paul Doherty's popular Sir Hugh Corbett series.

    The Mysterium
    3,5
  • Will Hugh Corbett be able to discover the truth before London is overrun by the sinister Pentangle in the stunning first novel of the Corbett series?

    Satan in St Mary's (Hugh Corbett Mysteries, Book 1)
    3,9
  • November, 1471. The newly-widowed Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond, is alone, without protectors. The discovery of the body of an unexpected visitor, found murdered in a locked room in her London townhouse, heralds the start of a series of increasingly menacing incidents which threaten Margaret and her household. Is there an enemy within?

    Dark Queen Watching
    3,8
  • The Nightingale Gallery

    • 256pages
    • 9 heures de lecture

    The terrific first novel in the superlative series The Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan

    The Nightingale Gallery
    3,9
  • In the summer of 314, dark figures who lurk in the twilight of Roman society are on the prowl, and Rome is shocked by a series of gruesome murders in the third novel featuring imperial secret agent Claudia

    The Queen of the Night (Ancient Rome Mysteries, Book 3)
    3,8
  • The Cup of Ghosts

    • 416pages
    • 15 heures de lecture

    By 1322, Mathilde of Westminster was considered the finest physician in London. But in her years as lady-in-waiting to Princess Isabella, she was drawn into the murky politics of the English court, where sudden, mysterious death was part of the tapestry of life. Many years later, Mathilde looks back and chronicles her turbulent life. With her sharp, suspicious intellect ready to distinguish between a fatality and an unnatural death, Mathilde is confronted by a host of chilling murders. The source of these horrors is the fierce political rivalry between Philip of France and Edward of England. This manifests itself in a series of gruesome killings, one of which actually took place during Edward II's Coronation, when a knight of the Royal Household, Sir John Baquelle was crushed to death.

    The Cup of Ghosts
    3,8
  • Agrippina, wife of Claudius, mother of Nero, was a beautiful and talented woman who saw her father murdered, was banished by her brother, and was killed on the orders of her son. Her freed man, a one-eyed former gladiator named Parmenon, tells of Agrippina's battle to survive in and control the depraved and violent Imperial Roman court, and the crumbling relationship between mother and son.

    Domina
    3,7
  • A Secret History of Tutankhamun

    • 260pages
    • 10 heures de lecture

    What-or who-really killed Egypt's glorious young king?Since the discovery of the magnificent tomb of Tutankhamun at Thebes by Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon in 1922, the name of the young Pharaoh has become famous throughout the world.The boy-king came to the throne aged twelve during one of Egypt's most turbulent periods, when religious dissent threatened to destroy a mighty empire. He should have lived out a long and prosperous reign but died mysteriously just six years after his accession, aged just eighteen.Was he secretly assassinated by the powerful cartel that ran the court and the country? What part did Ay, Tutankhamun's ambitious first minister, play in his master's death? Did Ay murder the Pharaoh to claim the imperial crown for himself?Using modern research, coupled with Carter's original testimony, Paul Doherty presents a thought-provoking account, resolving many contentious issues, offering important new theories and explaining the dark intrigue that surrounded the untimely death of Tutankhamun.

    A Secret History of Tutankhamun
    3,5
  • The first brilliant novel in the Templar series describes the founding of the mysterious order of the Templars, and evokes the brutality and bravery of those setting out on a Crusade to free Jerusalem

    The Templar (Templars, Book 1)
    3,3
  • A 'Canterbury Tales' medieval mystery - As Chaucer's pilgrims shelter for the night, it's the physician's turn to enthral his fellow travellers with a terrifying tale. When Brother Anselm and his novice Stephen are summoned to the Church of St Michael's, Candlewick, to perform an exorcism, the demons that plague the church appear to have been summoned by an infamous sorcerer known as the Midnight Man. But what has he unwittingly unleashed - and why? Is there any link to the disappearance of young women in the area? Before Anselm can get to the truth, he must first uncover the identity of the mysterious Midnight Man.

    The Midnight Man
    2,9