Reviews for City of masks

Publishers Weekly
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In Sykes's superior third Somershill Manor novel (after 2016's The Butcher Bird), Oswald de Lacy, Lord Somershill, and his mother embark on a journey to the Holy Land in 1357, but a war between Hungary and the Venetian Republic strands them for months in Venice, where they find a temporary home with an old family friend, the Englishman John Bearpark. Unfortunately, Oswald's presence in the city during the conflict arouses the suspicions of the authorities. His situation becomes even more perilous after a member of John's household is murdered, his face savagely butchered. Oswald's mother volunteers that he's had success in the past solving murders, and his host asks him to find the killer. Oswald, who has lost a lot of money gambling, agrees to sleuth for a fee large enough to cover his debt. Sykes's gamble in putting Oswald in unfamiliar terrain pays off, as she again blends a detailed immersion in the time period with a clever mystery plot line. Agent: Gordon Wise, Curtis Brown (U.K.). (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* The first two mysteries in the Somershill Manor series focused on fourteenth-century rural England following an outbreak of the Great Plague. This third installment, still starring Oswald de Lacy, who became a too-young and too-unprepared Lord Somershill after his father and two older brothers died in the plague, follows Oswald to Venice in 1358, as he travels through Europe to try to outrun the mental darkness that has consumed him for years. Sykes' depiction of depression is one of the beauties of this book; she doesn't impose a modern perspective but instead gives Somershill's agony a presence, like a beast that is tracking him. Then Somershill trips over the mutilated body of a new friend in an alley, the grandson of the wealthy Englishman with whom Somershill is staying. Friendship and gambling debts compel Somershill to investigate the death for the grandfather's proffered fee. And we are plunged into Sykes' rich soup of Venetian intrigue (where even a casual trip to Piazza San Marco can result in imprisonment in the Doge's Palace), period detail, and increasingly intricate plotting, all with the deeply realized character of Lord Somershill fighting his own demons while investigating. A brilliant addition to the Somershill Manor novels.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2017 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A young man cannot escape his past no matter how far he runs.The carnival in Venice just before Lent of 1358 provides entertainment but no peace for Oswald de Lacy, Lord Somershill, whose trip to the Holy Land has stranded him and his mother in Venice because a war has halted all ships. They're staying at the home of John Bearpark, an old family friend. Bearpark's beautiful, much younger, and heavily pregnant wife, Filomena, is also there, along with two other pilgrims awaiting passage. Bearpark's grandson, Enrico, has been showing Oswald around Venice, and Oswald's gambling has put him deeply in debt to one of Enrico's friends, who demands payment within a week. After Oswald finds Enrico murdered, his mother brags about his past successes solving crimes (The Butcher Bird, 2016, etc.), and Bearpark engages him to find the killer, a task Oswald accepts only because he's desperate for money. Bearpark refuses to notify the authorities, and Oswald, who's already been questioned by them, agrees. Enrico's homosexuality was punishable by death in Venice, and Bearpark thinks his unknown lover killed him. With the help of Bearpark's clerk, Giovanni, Oswald travels around Venice searching for Filomena's vanished brother. Suffering from a deep melancholy, Oswald constantly feels that he's being watched, perhaps by the ghost of a depressed monkey he tried to rescue in London, but he can never bring himself to face what he fears. As he continues his investigation, he's once again detained and tortured by the authorities, who think he's a spy. Although he seems to be getting nowhere, he refuses to give up, and in the end, finding the truth sets him free from his despair. A Venice whose ancient glories still survive today provides the background for an investigation whose solution is secondary to identifying the cause of Oswald's angst. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

It's 1355, and Oswald de Lacy, Lord -Somershill, is in Venice awaiting transport to the Holy Land on a pilgrim ship. But Oswald can't escape involvement in a murder investigation when he stumbles upon a dead man during a Venetian carnival. This third series outing (after The Butcher Bird) offers further insights into Lord Somershill and the past that bedevils him, along with sophisticated plotting, intrigue, and immersion in a fascinating historical setting.-ACT © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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