The Uninvited Guest (A Gareth and Gwen Medieval Mystery Book 2)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.37 (775 Votes) |
Asin | : | B007B2G3U6 |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 519 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-05-17 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
From the AuthorBooks by Sarah WoodburyThe After Cilmeri Series: Daughter of Time (prequel)Footsteps in Time (Book 1)
It is the winter of 1143 and all is not well in the court of Owain, King of north Wales. Gareth and Gwen have marriage plans of their own, but their love will have to wait while the pair race to separate truth from lies, friends from foes, and unravel the mystery before King Owain--and his new bride--fall victim to their uninvited guest.The Uninvited Guest is the second Gareth & Gwen Medieval Mystery.. His future in-laws are untrustworthy, the Norman lords on his eastern border are restless, and among his wedding guests lurks a cold-blooded killer
murder and intrigue in medieval wales Pamela222 I really enjoy historical mysteries--Ellis Peters, Sharon Kay Penman, Deanna Raybourne, et al--and I absolutely loved this second entry in the Gareth and Gwen series. I really enjoyed The Good Knight, book 1 in the series, and in my opinion this book is even better. Gareth, a knight, and Gwen, the royal bard's daughter, must work together to solve a series of murders that threaten to disrupt the marriage of their king. The mystery keeps you guessing and on the edge of your seat with suspense over what will happen next. And the characters have reall. Great series I've read all but the last one. Not sure about it and mainly because of the death of one character as stated in the blurb.. what a series I really enjoy mysteries set in this period of time. I've read/am reading the entire series. The Welsh is kind of mind of mind boggling, but a minor inconvenience. I believe we English speakers have always regarded Welsh and Scottish as some what barbaric languages. The methods used to solve crimes before DNA, finger prints etc. gives a very good insight into how far we've come. I would recommend this series to anyone(s) interested in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland 10th and 11th century