Rate this book

The Lost Prophecies (2008)

by The Medieval Murderers(Favorite Author)
3.19 of 5 Votes: 2
ISBN
1847370934 (ISBN13: 9781847370938)
languge
English
publisher
Simon & Schuster UK
series
The Medieval Murderers
review 1: I didn't really have very high expectations for this book and was moderately okay with it for the most part, but the ending really derailed it for me. Since this book comprises six interlinked mysteries, I shall discuss each one separately.The overarching concept of this book is a set of cryptic Latin quatrains written by a sixth- or seventh-century Irish monk named Brân (whose name without the accent always made me think of muffins), who was basically the Irish Nostradamus. Anyway, his likely-seizure-inspired prophecies cause havoc through the ages, as the six "acts" show.Act 1 was all right. It adds the concept of someone copying out the Black Book of Brân (as it's known) and adding his own quatrain to the end to warn people that the book is basically a load of bollock... mores and that one should not read too much into it. This act features Bernard Knight's "Crowner John" and was actually not bad.Act 2 did not hold my interest very much. While I appreciate the unique perspective on the 1200s or whenever it was by showing Tartars and setting the story in a very cold part of northern Europe/Siberia (sorry, I've returned the book to the library so my recollections of the book are already growing dim) instead of focusing on England, I did not really enjoy the story and thought the solution kind of came out of left field. It was a classic closed-circle mystery but damned if I would have been able to figure it out.Act 3 actually managed to pique my interest, even though Michael Jecks did his damn "use a twee dating system involving the date in relation to feast days and years of kings' reigns, then put the real date in a footnote, instead of just PUTTING THE REAL DATE WITH THE TWEE DATE" thing that drives me up the wall. Unfortunately, the thing that piqued my interest was the fact that the victim was flayed alive. Ewwww, how horrifying. But other than that I was not really impressed. The killer came out of left field here too. Either I'm an idiot or these are not plotted very well. I'd rather it be the former, actually. It's a shame to have poorly plotted books.Act 4's setting of Cambridge was very nice, but I really did not care about the characters AT ALL and nearly gave up on the book here. There's only so many times you can read about characters "asking curiously" and "frowning unhappily" before you snap.Act 5 was actually quite good, comparatively speaking. I was a bit harsh on this author's act in King Arthur's Bones, but his contribution to this book was really neat. I think the plot and timing (around the time of the Gunpowder Plot in 1605) really helped sell this story for me. Easily my favourite act in this book.Act 6 was, to be blunt, a load of tosh. Set in 2135, it is the usual hodgepodge of post-apocalyptic climate change doom-and-gloom fiction, except with a book of Irish prophecies thrown in. I did appreciate that the author didn't really add too many novel technologies, but I'm just so jaded with all of these climate change stories that I was really not impressed. It also felt very threadbare in terms of plot, and the protagonist was not very relatable, at least for me.To sum up, I was not really enamoured of this book, but at least I borrowed it from the library. Had I bought it I would have been much more disappointed.
review 2: A collection of short stories centred around the theme of the Black Book of Bran, containing various prophecies by a seventh century Irish monk. I didn't enjoy this as much as earlier collections by the Medieval Murderers although some stories were better than others. New boy on the block C.J. Sansom adds a futuristic tale on the subject and, as much as I love his writing and liked this story, I didn't think it sat well with the other stories. less
Reviews (see all)
Smellyshelly
Recommended in the book, Tolstoy and the Purple Chair: My Year of Magical Reading.
limia
"... the love of money is the root of all evils." - John de Alençon, Pg, 64
ArishVasilyan
Really don't know if I will finish this. I find it extremely dull reading.
Lilsteph
Good start and interesting concept but I was not a fan of the finish.
kim
Audiobook read by Paul Matthews
Write review
Review will shown on site after approval.
(Review will shown on site after approval)