The Martian Ambassador
Book
WELCOME TO LONDON, 1899 It has been six years since the discovery of intelligent life on Mars, and...
Framley Parsonage: The Chronicles of Barsetshire
Francis O'Gorman, Anthony Trollope and Katherine Mullin
Book
'The fact is, Mark, that you and I cannot conceive the depth of fraud in such a man as that.' The...
Wolf Hall
Book
Winner of the Man Booker Prize 2009 Shortlisted for the Orange Prize and the Costa Novel Award...
Great Irish Heroes: Fifty Irishmen and Women Who Shaped the World
Book
How did the Irish independence movement lead directly to the invention of the modern submarine? Who...
There are Two Sexes: Essays in Feminology
Catherine Porter, Antoinette Fouque and Sylvina Boissonnas
Book
Antoinette Fouque cofounded the Mouvement de Liberation des Femmes (MLF) in France in 1968 and...
An Utterly Impartial History of Britain: (or 2000 Years of Upper Class Idiots in Charge)
Book
Many of us were put off history by the dry and dreary way it was taught at school. Back then 'The...
Marrow Charm
Book
'In his pursuit of the occult, the Third Reich opened the Gate to a realm of magic and brought the...
Two Thousand Years (The Empire Saga #1)
Book
Two thousand years ago, the Prophecy of Fire and Light foretold the coming of the Queen Empress who...
David McK (3425 KP) rated The Protector (William Falkland #2) in Books
Jul 3, 2022
As this starts, he has yet to find them.
It's into far into the novel before Cromwell again pulls Falkland into his orbit, offering his (and, by extension, Parliament's) help in discovering just what happened to Falkland's family and where they may be (perhaps in Oxford, the King's new capital?) as the First Civil War draws to a close - help that is, of course, contingent upon Falkland again carrying out an investigation for Cromwell: this time into just what happened to the sister of a prominent supporter of Parliament who has disappeared (abducted?): one Anne Agar, this sister of John Milton.
Yes, that John Milton. The author of Paradise Lost. Although that is never once mentioned here - I think (am nearly sure that) the setting here may be before he wrote that poem.
Once again, the narrative is told in the first-person view, with - once again - a warts-and-all picture given of life at the time, and with Falkland being both incredibly astute and incredibly blind at the same time! In other words, coming across as a 'real' person rather than as a literary construct.
I'm now going to go on record as saying: more, please!
Buildings of London
Book
Roger FitzGerald has practiced as an architect in london since he qualified over 30 years ago. He...