The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett (2008) Macmillan
The story runs from the days of Henry the first to Henry the second and the martyrdom of Thomas Beckett. It follows the life of two little boys, whose father and mother are killed by soldiers in front of them and rescued by an Abbot, who raises them. Through their lives as a Prior of a Monastery and a Priest in the service of royalty (a little bit of John Jakes here). A stone mason, who aspires to build a cathedral becomes the other force to move the story, demonstrating the lofty goals of people who wish the period after Henry I did not devolve into civil war between Stephen (Henry’s nephew) and the Empress Maud (Henry’s daughter) known as the Anarchy. Follett does an excellent job on the history, getting the players and events correct. The pivotal event for the story involves a plot to interrupt the succession in hopes for a weak king, the barons conspired to kill his son, William II, at sea. However, there was a survivor, which they imprisoned to keep him quiet, in fear that he knew enough to bring them to justice. In Follett’s story, this man is visited in his cell by a woman who lives in the nearby forest. She is pregnant when they decide to kill him by hanging under a false charge. A local knight’s son is a ruffian whose family successfully accuses the local Earl of being against King Stephen
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