First edition bound in black cloth with silver lettering. A Fine copy in a Near Fine dust jacket. The dust jacket has mild rubbing to the head of its spine and at its corners.
Paul Doherty was born in Middlesbrough (North-Eastern England) in 1946. He had the usual education before studying at Durham for three years for the Catholic priesthood but decided not to proceed. He went to Liverpool University where he gained a First Class Honours Degree in History and won a state scholarship to Exeter College, Oxford, whilst there he met his wife Carla Lynn Corbitt. He continued his studies but decided that the academic world was not for him and became a secondary school teacher.
Paul worked in Ascot, Nottingham and Crawley West Sussex before being appointed as Headmaster to Trinity Catholic School in September 1981. Trinity is a large comprehensive [1700 on roll] which teaches the full ability range, ages 11-18. The school has been described as one of the leading comprehensives in the U.K. In April, 2000 H. M. Inspectorate describe it as an 'Outstanding School', and it was given Beacon status as a Centre of Excellence whilst, in the Chief Inspector’s Report to the Secretary of State for January 2001, Trinity Catholic High School was singled out for praise and received a public accolade.
Paul’s other incarnation is as a novelist. He finished his doctorate on the reign of Edward II of England and, in 1987, began to publish a series of outstanding historical mysteries set in the Middle Age, Classical, Greek, Ancient Egypt and elsewhere. These have been published in the United States by St. Martin’s Press of New York, Edhasa in Spain, and Eichborn, Heyne, Knaur and others in Germany. They have also been published in Holland, Belgium, France, Italy, Romania, Estonia, Czechoslovakia, Russia, Bulgaria, Portugal and China, as well as Argentina and Mexico.
He has been published under several pseudonyms (see the bibliography): C. L. Grace, Paul Harding, Ann Dukthas and Anna Apostolou but now writes only under his own name. He recently launched a very successful series based around the life of Alexander the Great, published by Constable & Robinson in the U.K., and Carroll and Graf in the U.S.A., whilst his novels set in Ancient Egypt have won critical acclaim. Paul has also written several non-fiction titles; A Life of Isabella the She-wolf of France, Wife of Edward II of England, as well as study of the possible murder of Tutankhamun, the boy Pharaoh of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty, and a study on the true fate of Alexander the Great.
Paul and Carla live on the borders of London and Essex, not far from Epping Forest and six of their children have been through his own school. His wife Carla currently owns two horses and is training, for showing and dressage, a beautiful Arab filly named Polly.
Paul lectures for a number of organisations, particularly on historical mysteries, many of which later feature in his writings. A born speaker and trained lecturer Paul Doherty can hold and entertain audiences.
His one great ambition is to petition the Privy Council of England to open the Purbeck marble tomb of Edward II in Gloucester Cathedral. Paul believes the tomb does not house the body
Read this book in 2012, and its the 6th volume of the excellent "Canterbury Tales" series, featuring Geoffrey Chaucer and his pilgrims on their way from London to Canterbury.
This time its the Clerk of Oxford's turn to tell his tale of love and death.
In a Kent forest he will his tale about love and death in a most chilling fashion, so much so that every sound in the forest will play on their nerves.
What will follow is an ghostly and thrilling mystery, in which the Clerk of Oxford brings forth in a most enthralling way the cruelty and deviousness in medieval England, that will definitely chill your blood.
Highly recommended, for this is another splendid addition of this superb series, and that's why I like to call this episode: "A Marvellous Haunting Mystery"!
This mystery story is at a good pace. The tail is good mostly told by an women that has just been murdered, an won't move on cause she has unfinished business.. She wants to help the love of her heart find out who bashed in her head an pushed her of the wall. So if you like a good old fashion English mystery well this is for you. Well slip an dipped I got the killer wrong!! I must say this was one hell of mystery.
An odd and very entertaining book. Ostensibly, it's a tale told by a pilgrim on the way to Canterbury. It's part murder mystery and part quasi-religious horror story. Very fast-moving, very entertaining.
This wasn't so scary but just really sad. I really wanted Beatrice's reward to be another chance at life, though of course that isn't possible. Having read this I can now see why some people believe in ghosts.
Great story, moved quickly Well written mystery story with lots of twists and turns. Medieval tale rich with description, haunted with every manner of ghosts.
3.5 Short but captivating. The story continues to weave the lives of the pilgrims together and I cannot wait to reach a conclusion in the next and last book! Another great job by the King of historical murder-mystery’s.
This is the second of the "Canterbury Tales" mysteries of PC Doherty that I've read. Like the first, it is more of a fantasy than a historical tale, with supernatural elements even more strongly present in Midnight Man. The story weaves a treasure hunt, the peasant's Revolt, and May Day celebration with religion, ghosts, and murder.
Again, Doherty managed to surprise me with the identity of the perpetrators, but the mystery takes back stage to a morality play involving ghosts and demons and angels, a supernatural battle behind the scenes told with appropriately spooky descriptions.
A fair story, but this series seems Doherty's weakest of all the different ones I've read.