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Hardcover The Inquisitor Book

ISBN: 0312308159

ISBN13: 9780312308155

The Inquisitor

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Book Overview

El padre Bernard Peyre de la abad?a de Lezet, ?el inquisidor del t?tulo?es el narrador de este bien construido suspense situado en la Francia del siglo XIV, en el que uno de sus superiores, el padre... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Compelling examination of self-delusion

Bernard Peyre enjoys his job as an inquisitor in 14th century France, and believes that he serves a critical role in rooting out heretics and preserving the church. When he gets a new boss, he wonders whether the man might be too strict, but he respects Father Augustin's faith and willingness to re-open old cases--to go after heretics that might have somehow escaped his predecessor. Still, Bernard is concerned that Augustin seems fascinated by a small group of women, living together without the benefit of a priest's oversight. Women, Bernard knows, are surely a cause of a man's downfall.When Augustin is found, murdered, while returning from a visit to these women, Bernard is concerned that a heretic might have struck. He visits the women and finds himself in love with one of them. As a monk, Bernard's vows prohibit sexual love, but he is convinced that this love is somehow sacred despite his friend and confessor's strong warnings. When Bernard's new boss arrives with concerns over demon summoning--something that Bernard knows has not happened in his region, things begin to fall out of control.Author Catherine Jinks gives life and insight into religious life in medieval France. To the end, Bernard believes in the inquisition, despite what it does to himself and those he loves. Bernard is a wonderful character--quick to justify his actions even when they are truly out of line, often unable to separate lust from divine rapture, and proud of his intelligence at the same time as he is aware of (at least some of) his shortcomings. THE INQUISITOR is not a who-dunnit type of mystery, but it is a fascinating exploration of man's capability for self-delusion and of good intentions leading to terrible results.

Authentic, irreverent and witty

Australian author Jinks? debut features an unusual protagonist, Brother Bernard, Inquisitor of Heretical Depravity, in Lazet, France, in 1318. Bernard is a devout but irreverent soul whose narrative is a defense against accusations following his investigation of the murder of a superior, the ascetic Father Augustin.Augustin and his guards were dismembered, their body parts strewn over the countryside. But the sharp-witted Bernard (as he is quick to declare himself) soon questions whether the butchery was only to disguise a missing body ? the culprit. Assigned a new superior who blames the murder on sorcery, the horrified Bernard struggles to discover the truth and conceal his newfound passion for a suspect.Jinks breathes life into her narrator, a man of complex passions and humor, proud of his work in keeping heresy from taking root. Exploring the phenomenon of the Inquisition, Jinks shows how fanatics joined forces with Church bureaucrats like Bernard; how fear drove hysteria; how neighbor turned on neighbor. This world, so strange and repugnant to the modern mind, so ordinary to Bernard, gains understanding with the reader as it loses luster for Bernard. Well-written and penetrating, as well as entertaining and well paced, this deserves wide readership.

insightful authentic historical novel

Early in the fourteenth century in Lazet, France Dominican Brother Bernard enjoys his pious position as assistant to Father Jacques, the Head of the Inquisition into Heretical Depravity. However, Brother Bernard's comfortable lifestyle abruptly ends in 1318 when someone kills Father Jacques, dismembering the corpse.Ailing ascetic Father Augustin replaces Father Jacques and quickly digs deep into the homicide as well as several incidents in which his predecessor declared local VIPs free of heresy. Demanding the accounts of the Inquisitorial registers, Father Augustin learns several are missing. Father Augustin also makes inquiries into an enclave of women living just outside of Lazet, thinking females living alone practice witchcraft or prostitution. However, a massacre occurs as someone(s) slices up Augustin and his ensemble. The new Inquisition leader Pierre-Julien plans to prove that the women and Bernard are ritual murdering heretics even if he lacks any evidence.Those readers who demand authenticity in a historical novel will prefer the uncompromising and invigorating look at the fourteenth century through the mindset of a Dominican Inquisitor. Bernard's first person narration enables the reader to observe what seems so hypocritical from the perspective of modern times as the Inquisitors use biblical doctrine to defend their "under God" actions. Catherine Jinks' well written and insightful debut novel is a triumph for those who desire accuracy, but the audience should realize that it will take the paradigm switch of a historiographer to appreciate this deep look at a period of religious fervor and terror.Harriet Klausner
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