Time
Another remarkable, highly evocative novel.
Washington Post
The joys in the Peters mysteries lie in the telling -- the historical detail, the view of medieval life in town and monastery, the lively characterization and the author's graceful, literate prose.
Cleveland Plain Dealer
Each book is an elegant little mystery, gracefully written, cleverly plotted and richly detailed, full of the sounds and the color and the customs of twelfth-century England.
Houston Post
The books have the freshness of a new world at dawn...Peters weaves a complex, colorful, and at times quite beautiful tapestry.
Financial Times
Brother Cadfael, in this thirteenth adventure, is as keen and human as ever. The Rose Rent is one of his most satisfactory chronicles.
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
In this 13th mystery in the Brother Cadfel series, a beautiful widow rents part of her estate to the brothers of Shrewsbury Abbey for the modest sum of one rose from a certain bush, per year, and all are happy with this arrangement for three years. But then Brother Eluric,the young monk whose job it is to deliver the rose on the day of St. Winifred's translation (the pre-arranged rent-paying day) asks to be excused from the task (he finds he's starting to fall in love with the widow); he is later found murdered near the recently ruined rose rent bush. The abbey is thrown into a panic; not only has an innocent young monk been killed, but with no rose to pay the rent, the contract is canceled and the widow's wealth multiplies remarkably. Soon, the widow herself disappears, and Brother Cadfel begins his search for her and for Eluric's murderer, casting his eye over a large collection of suitors, all of whom would gain greatly from a match with the widow. Peters (The Raven in the Foregate is in fine form in this 13th book, with a leisurely mystery that once again creates a 12th century world that is both comfortable and strange, and a series of delightful, interesting characters. (June 18)
From the Publisher
"Masterful . . . An accomplished whodunit meticulously wrought with a wealth of medieval detail.” —Booklist “Brother Cadfael, in his thirteenth adventure, is as keen and human as ever. The Rose Rent is one of his most satisfactory chronicles.” —Financial Times “The joys in the Peters mysteries lie in the telling—the historical detail, the view of medieval life in town and monastery, the lively characterization and the author’s graceful, literate prose.” —The Washington Post