Firedrake's Eye

by Patricia Finney

Paper Book, 1992

Status

Available

Call number

Fic Historical Finney

Collection

Publication

New York : Picador USA, 1998, c1992.

Description

London, 1583. The loyal courtier Simon Ames is viciously beaten. Is the attack random, or has Ames been the victim of a subtly treasonous act? A nonsense poem written by the lunatic Tom O'Bedlam has become a favourite of London's ballad sellers. Who has taken the meanderings of a madman so seriously and why? Following a trail of murder, treason and terror, Ames sets out to find the truth. But as he digs deeper into the human midden that is Elizabethan London, the puzzle becomes an enigma, then a riddle.

User reviews

LibraryThing member lindymc
I *loved* this book! It absolutely does take a bit of concentration and effort to get all the characters and various plotlines lined out ... but once that is done (1st 50 or so pages), then away we go.

The mystery is very well-developed and the writing is almost lyrical. (Ms. Finney knows thing or
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two about stringing words together!) In terms of writing style & complexity, I would loosely compare Ms. Finney with Dorothy Dunnett (Lymond Chronicles).

She does a masterful job of setting her scenes, some of which will stay with you long after the book is gone - one that leaps immediately to mind involved "Harry Hunks" a kind-of-tame bear used in bear baiting entertainments for the London populace. Not only is the scene vividly written, it's also quite humorous! (Not to give anything away, but the bear is not hurt and actually becomes a bit of a hero.)

I adore the main character - David Becket - a master swordsman/teacher who has a dry, cynical view of the world, but remains a patriot and a true, trustworthy friend to those deemed deserving of such loyalty.

The book is set in Elizabethan England with all the glory at the top and squalor at the bottom that these times were rife with. It was particularly interesting to me to read about the art of intelligence-gathering in these days. None of today's spy agencies have a thing over Lord Walsingham and his network of informants and spies! AND, it was all done without the aid of computers and cell phones!

Highest recommendation for anyone looking for an intelligent, complex, well-written Elizabethan mystery.

(Review written by LoisAnn, Lindymc's daughter.)
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LibraryThing member BMVCOE
I really love the narrator of this book, a man from a noble family who went mad and was sent to the asylum at Bedlam (Bethlehem), later rescued from there by a friend. Now he wanders the streets, by turns sane and raving, tormented by hearing the song "Mad Tom O'Bedlam"--which he wrote, as a taunt
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to the brother who had him locked up in the first place--popularized in the streets with a chorus he didn't write. When "Tom" isn't wrestling with his angels or devils, the "Clever One" is helping his friend Becket and his employer Simon Ames foil a plot to assasinate Queen Elizabeth through more a series of coincidences than actual detective work...but how else would you discover it if you're looking for trouble in the wrong places?

I love the language of this book, chosen not to accurately represent Elizabethan English, but to give a hint of the color of its speech. I also really liked the various struggles in the book, between Tom's madness that brings visions of the truth and the Clever One struggling to articulate these to his friends, between the clash of religions and Simon's struggle between religion, politics, and morality. In the end, the sentiment that it does not matter what faith you believe in as long as you have faith in something comes across: “When all is ended it makes less than a fragment of a fragment of infinity, the length of our life on this earth.” I find this very comforting, especially given the situation in Afghanistan where a man who converted from Islam to Christianity is in danger of being killed according to Muslim law there. Somehow religion is becoming embroiled in politics these days…and I don’t know if that’s healthy, given that your religious identity does not automatically correspond with your political identity, despite what some politicians and/or religious leaders are saying.
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LibraryThing member bhowell
When I read this book way back when, I said I enjoyed it more than Restoration by Rose Tremain. I think I have to stick by that.
LibraryThing member a1stitcher
Narrated by a madman named Ralph, this is a mystery set in Elizabethan England. Who is trying to assassinate Elizabeth I this time? This is the business of Sir Francis Walsingham and the men who work for him, very much like a Tudor version of the CIA.
The language in this book reads very true to
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the time period and took a few pages for me to get into. Once I found the rhythm of the writing, it was easy to follow, and the ending was a bit of a surprise. I love a book I cannot completely figure out during the first chapters. I'll be reading the other two books in this series and hoping they are just as entertaining as this one.
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LibraryThing member NaggedMan
A good read.

Language

Original publication date

1992

Physical description

viii, 263 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

0312180942 / 9780312180942

DDC/MDS

Fic Historical Finney

Rating

½ (49 ratings; 3.6)
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