Just finished Tony Hays' The Killing Way, the first of a series of mysteries set in Arthurian Britain.
How was it? Hadn't heard of it before now, but it sounds like something both Laura and I might find interesting.
I'll write up something more detailed on my blog in a few days (comparing it to the other Arthurian mystery series from J.W.C. Blair, most likely), but for the nonce...
I liked it. It's an attempt at an historical Arthur, so imagine an environment not unlike Bernard Cornwall or Jack Whyte's Arthurian series, and with a murder mystery on top of that. A serving girl is murdered on the eve of the election of a new High King, Merlin is blamed, and a former soldier of Arthur's army is entrusted to solve the crime. The back cover copy compared it to
The Name of the Rose, but it's not really similar at all. (The jacket blurb compared it to
CSI meets Brother Cadfael, which is probably closer.)
I didn't outthink the mystery (unlike the first book of Blair's series, which had a bloody obvious murderer, only it took Merlin another 250 pages to catch up), but there are some other non-mystery plot elements that are painfully obvious. There's also a red herring that I expected to go somewhere, only it didn't. Characterizations are a little thin. It reads fast, the prose flows decently well and doesn't call attention to itself. It's your basic historical procedural, albeit one set in the misty 6th-century CE.
All in all, it was a decent first book in the series, and I'll probably pick up the second book,
The Divine Sanction, when it comes out next month. That one's supposed to involve St. Patrick, the Abbey at Glastonbury, and the Pelagian heresy.
You can get it in hardcover for $4.99
here.