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The Way Between the Worlds

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
'A must for historical mystery afficionados' - Booklist Starred Review
Come to me! I need you! These are the words that bring apprentice healer Lassair awake one morning in the spring of 1092, shaking and trembling, covered in sweat despite the chill night. It is not the first time she has had such a dream, and Lassair – who is growing more aware of the strange power within her – knows that something in the spirit world is trying to reach her. Something increasingly insistent and threatening.
Soon, Lassair is certain that one of her loved ones is in terrible danger – but who? Travelling from Cambridge, where she is studying under the tutelage of an extraordinary man, she returns to her backwater Fenland village – to hear the dreadful news that a nun at Chatteris Abbey has been murdered. The same nunnery where her beloved sister, Elfritha, lives. Could the urgent summons have come from her? Lassair immediately sets off, full of fear, but the danger she will have to face may be greater than she is ready for . . .
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 5, 2011
      Set in 1092, Clare’s enjoyable fourth whodunit featuring apprentice healer Lassair (after 2010’s Music of the Distant Stars) finds Lassair living in Cambridge with a wizard, Gurdyman, from whom she hopes to learn the secrets of alchemy. Plagued by disturbing dreams, she interprets these as an effort on the part of a loved one to alert her that he or she is in distress. Her worst fears are realized when word reaches her family that a nun at the abbey where her sister, Elfritha, serves has been murdered in a manner suggesting the victim was intended as a ritual sacrifice. Clare does a nice job of weaving the real-life political concerns of the time—King Malcolm of Scotland has designs on the English crown—into the story line, though readers should be prepared for a world in which magic is real.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from December 15, 2011
      Clare's Aelf Fen series, set in eleventh-century England, gets better and better. In the latest installment, neophyte healer Lassair experiences disturbing dreams, in which someone she can't identify is calling for her help. Terrified that a member of her family is in danger, Lassair leaves Cambridge and the home of her mentor, Gurdyman, for her home village. There, she learns that her beloved sister, Elfritha, a novice nun at nearby Chatteris Abbey, is critically ill, and another nun has been murdered. But even when Elfritha begins to mend, the disturbing dreams continue. While Lassair is still trying to discover what her dreams mean, the reader is transported to northern England, where Rollo, a Norman knight, has been given a dangerous and desperate mission by the king of England, a mission on which the future of the country depends. While carrying out the king's task, Rollo comes perilously close to death, and he knows in his heart that only Lassair, the woman he loves, and who loves him in return, can extract him from his horrifying predicament. From the very first page, readers are taken on a thrilling, dangerous, suspenseful, otherworldly, pulse-quickening journey, and until the very last, it's not clear whether the ending will be happy or disastrous. A must for historical mystery aficionados.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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