Thursday 5 February 2015

One of these books is not like the other ones....




The first blood to be drawn in the English Civil Wars, at the Battle of Edgehill in autumn 1642. The King raises his standard against Parliament, and for bright, handsome young Puritan Thankful Russell, his new officer's commission in the Army of Parliament is the gateway to a freedom and a happiness he has never known before. Freedom, and friendship, and an escape from his zealot sister, and a new purpose in life. (And girls, and laughter, and music, and all the other things that any ordinary good-looking young man at nineteen takes for granted.)

But Thankful is no ordinary young man, and these are not ordinary times, and before the day has ended his life will take a turn that he never, in his wildest dreams, imagined.

Or his worst nightmares.


A Cloak of Zeal is a darker turn for the Babbitt books. But then, Russell is Hollie Babbitt's dark shadow.

Darker, and altogether harsher, and the first chapter made me cry and it made my other half very angry. And as for the end.... well, we must thank God that we know what we know, and that it does not end there.

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Awarded for Excellence in Research by 17th-Century Specialists

Awarded for Excellence in Research by 17th-Century Specialists