The Sixth Lamentation: Number 1 in series (Father Anselm Novels)

The Sixth Lamentation: Number 1 in series (Father Anselm Novels)

by WilliamBrodrick (Author)

Synopsis

A man arrives at Larkwood Monastery claiming sanctuary. Edward Schwermann is accused of Nazi war crimes: the chances are he's stained with blood, but politics demand that Larkwood shelter him. And Schwermann has intimated that the Church offered him sanctuary once before, during the war. It is this potentially embarrassing claim which brings Father Anselm onto centre stage. Once a lawyer, Anselm is sanctioned to make discreet enquiries in Rome, but as he edges towards the truth behind Schwermann's crimes, his renewed contact with the outside world threatens to overwhelm his fragile spiritual identity. For Agnes Embleton, seeing Schwermann's face on the television has brought back a flood of memories: of Paris, of The Round Table, a group of idealistic students who tried to save thousands of Jewish children from deportation, of the Frenchman who betrayed them and of Schwermann, the German officer who sent the children to their deaths. But what Agnes doesn't know and Anselm discovers is the personal investment Schwermann had in The Round Table, the silent bargains made by its members and the true extent of Schwermann's final treachery.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Little, Brown
Published: 27 Feb 2003

ISBN 10: 0316861626
ISBN 13: 9780316861625

Media Reviews
* 'William Brodrick has written a tense, sophisticated, wholly convincing novel of suspense. This is a remarkable debut' - MICHAEL HOLROYD * 'It is a wonderful book . should go on to become a classic...one of the most interesting writers I have come across in a long time' - PAUL BRITTON, author of The Jigsaw Man * It's indeed rare to find such a masterful blending of sharp suspense and literary resonance . a truly compelling novel - JEFFREY DEAVER, author of The Vanished Man It is a wonderful book, it has a timeless quality and really should go on to become a classic. It reminds me of the early works of John le Carre, but captures much more accurately the internal workings of ordinary people, and shows how, just by bumping into each other, they can be utterly transformed, and go on to extraordinarily brave and cowardly acts. It pointed out so well how the threads of those small day by day choices made by us, or for us, become intertwined and grow so quickly into the great net that, with hindsight, we call history...one of the most interesting writers I have come across in a long time - Paul Britton, author of The Jigsaw Man The Sixth Lamentation is a meticulously-plotted, cat's cradle of a mystery with the interwoven stories pulled as taut as a piano-wire. The setting of Paris during the war is invoked to chilling effect. William Brodrick has written the first of what I hope will be a series of especially literate thrillers - Martha Grimes It's indeed rare to find such a masterful blending of sharp suspense and literary resonance as we see in The Sixth Lamentation. Brodrick has produced a truly compelling novel - Jeffery Deaver, author of The Vanished Man and The Stone Monkey
Author Bio
In a career change that mirrors Father Anselm's, Bill Brodrick was a Benedictine monk before leaving the order to become a practising barrister. This is his first novel and Agnes's story is loosely based on a journal written by his mother.