Add this copy of Death in the Forest to cart. $44.06, very good condition, Sold by John C. Newland rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Cheltenham, Glos., UNITED KINGDOM, published 1977 by Constable.
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Seller's Description:
Used-Very Good. VG hardback in VG dust jacket. Nice, bright copy in tight binding; blue cloth with gilt titles on spine; pages neat & well-preserved; dust jacket price clipped.
Add this copy of Death in the Forest to cart. $50.00, very good condition, Sold by Murder By The Book rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Cranston, RI, UNITED STATES, published 1977 by Constable.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Book 1st ed. Some light wear at edges else very good in lighty rubbed dj, chipping at corners, several short tears. Stamped "Supplied for the Public. Service" stamped at bottom of pages along with stamp of a crown. Stamped "H.M. Yacht Britannia Library No. 867" on front end paper. Historical setting in England in the years following the Norman Conquest. To make his New Forest a hunting preserve, William the Conqueror destroyed churches and villages, and it was believed that in revenge the forest would prove fatal to his sons. This is the story of their deaths-and of what lay behind them. The story's heroine is Edith, a princess of Scotland and descendant of the Saxon kings of England. She lives in a nunnery at Romsey, between the forest and Winchester, the ancient capital of Wessex. Yearning to rescue England from the Normans, she is far from reconciled to spending her life immured as a nun. But although sent to Romsey to be secluded from the world, Edith is not sheltered from intrigue and violent death-or even from the opportunity of becoming queen. On her very first day four lords come to view her beauty and one of them is murdered. Who is the murderer? And what will be the effect on the succession to England and Normandy? Edith is determined to find out. The famous figures of the eleventh century are portrayed here. Edith, known to history as the Rose of Romsey, meets all the Conqueror's quarrelsome sons, his diminutive but formidable queen and even the awesome Conqueror himself. She visits Edward the Confessor's widow and is herself visited by Archbishop Anselm, companion of popes and scourge of kings. The abbess, who is her aunt, and Father Edmund, her confessor, form part of the intrigue which Edith seeks to unravel.