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A Burnable Book

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A Burnable Book

By: Bruce Holsinger
Narrated by: Tim Bruce
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About this listen

A stunning debut historical thriller set in the turbulent 14th century, for fans of CJ Sansom, The Name of the Rose and An Instance of the Fingerpost.

London, 1385. A city of shadows and fear, in a kingdom ruled by the headstrong young King Richard II, haunted by the spectre of revolt. A place of poetry and prophecy, where power is bought by blood.

For John Gower, part-time poet and full-time trader in information, secrets are his currency. When close confidant, fellow poet Geoffrey Chaucer, calls in an old debt, Gower cannot refuse.

The request is simple: track down a missing book. It should be easy for a man of Gower’s talents, who knows the back-alleys of Southwark as intimately as the courts and palaces of Westminster.

But what Gower does not know is that this book has already caused one murder, and that its contents could destroy his life.

Because its words are behind the highest treason – a conspiracy to kill the king and reduce his reign to ashes…

©2014 Bruce Holsinger (P)2014 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Crime Thrillers Historical International Mystery & Crime Urban Fiction King Mystery Royalty England
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Critic reviews

‘This is a rich novel…Bruce Holsinger is a leading American scholar of the Middle Ages and his debut novel combines detailed knowledge of the period with an undoubted gift for gripping storytelling’ BBC History magazine

‘This book has almost everything you could want in a historical fiction – rich in period detail and driven by a compulsively engaging and tangled story…The characters are well drawn, the social mores related in unapologetic detail and his multi-layered plot shows a superb storytelling fluency comparable with C.J. Sansom and Nancy Bilyeux.’ Crime Review

‘An enjoyable story of murder and intrigue in 14th-century London’ Sunday Times

‘Holsinger carries the reader to Oxford, Italy and Spain, but the highlight is his description of medieval London with its murky, poverty-stricken streets…enjoyable and intelligent’ Daily Mail

‘His profound knowledge of the 14th century provides a wonderfully convincing backdrop… his London feels like a real place, from St Paul’s churchyard to Southwark’s Gropecunt Lane. Comparisons with C.J. Sansom are inevitable, and justified’ Andrew Taylor, Spectator

‘John Gower is the perfect narrator and amateur sleuth …Holsinger's research, alongside the energetic vulgarity of a language in flux, delivers up a world where even the filth is colorful’ New York Times Book Review

‘A murder, a verse and a whore; the prologue of Bruce Holsinger`s A BURNABLE BOOK draws the reader in and does not let go. A deep understanding of the period combines with sophisticated writing to create a richly imagined world. Excellent historical fiction’ Harry Sidebottom, bestselling author of the WARRIOR OF ROME series

‘A lush bibliomaniac thriller… Holsinger is a graceful guide to the 14th century, lacing his thriller with just the right seasoning of antique words and all the necessary historical detail without any of the fusty smell of a documentary’ Ron Charles Washington Post

What listeners say about A Burnable Book

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Great narrator but confusing story.

I found like I was getting so confused when listening to this. I was forgetting who was who and what everyone was doing. It did get a but clearer near the end but I think I had given up by then. Bruce was a great narrator but the story let him down.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Fabulous and well researched

What did you like most about A Burnable Book?

A rollicking good read about a man we can empathise with. Characters are believable and you grow to like them. It's also interesting to cloak Chaucer with contemporaries and background, and it focuses on a period I'm really interested in. Having lived in Kent in a village with it's church dedicated to St Dunstan...and had a daughter who went to uni at Goldsmiths College - deep in the Southwark stews.. it's the right book for me, well written and narrated - I highly recommend it.

Who was your favorite character and why?

You can't get passed John Gower- very much like Mantel's Cromwell, but without the same extent of royal patronage. You can never get passed his history, or how he deals with his issues with sight and investigation. I'm going to miss him in my life now I've finished this and the following book.

What does Tim Bruce bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you had only read the book?

This is a natural narrator. I like him telling me a story. -This is the right voice for the story - doesn't try too hard to put on different voices - in the same way your brain doesn't when you read a book yourself. The only reason I have returned books to Audible is that the narrator irritates me and this one really doesn't

Did you have an emotional reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

it connected me to the history of places I know well. It didn't make me laugh or cry, but made me question what really is new, and haven't we carried our histories, assumptions, and behaviours down the centuries regardless of how the world has changed

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

An excellent read.

I enjoyed this book immensely and have listened to it a few Timex's now a d have not tired of it. A very exciting book whick kept me interested all the way through.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

How many climaxes does one book need?

The story started well and was reasonably engaging. When I thought it had got to the end, though, it just kept going on and on with so many red herrings! I'm not sure now that I know or care who did what.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

This is an odd one to review!

Would you listen to A Burnable Book again? Why?

Yes. This is (to my taste) a difficult book to get into. The writing style isn't CJ Sansom, Paul Dohery, Susanna Gregory, or like anyone else. BUT I persevered and by the time I was around half way through, I had got used to the language and the rhythm, and I found, to my surprise, I was hooked.

Who was your favorite character and why?

No one: John Gower is a user of peoples frailties and indiscretions for his own means. Chaucer is a womaniser and of no moral value. There is no one likeable in this book.

Which character – as performed by Tim Bruce – was your favourite?

Again - No one. As I've said, its a strange book: there is no character I was firmly behind and that I wanted to prevail. There is no character I particularly wanted to have their comeuppance. They are all self serving and conniving, but perhaps that's a more accurate portrait of how people sometimes are.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

Yes possibly: Gower has gone to the maudlin's brothel - wont spoil the book for future readers, but a maudlin is murdered by a Knight. He shows some compassion in that situation.

Any additional comments?

If this were on my kindle as a readable book, rather than an audio book, I would have sent it to "cloud" after a couple of chapters, never to be brought back again. I am glad it wasn't, because as I've said; its not an easy read/listen but it does all come together in a very clever way and on many occasions throughout, I did think "ah yes that makes sense" and the puzzle pieces fell into place. I am now just starting to listen to The invention of Fire, the second book, and as I am more familiar with the writing style, it flows better. A GREAT BIG FYI- if you listen to this via Sonos, or a docking station & have young children, or those of a nervous nature around, the terms repeatedly used for some of the locations are shocking and not for the feint hearted; once it goes on, you do get used to these terms, but to start with (cooking dinner with not so small son & with Sonos on - not good) be aware of who may also be listening!

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Not the best of its genre

There's a fair amount of fiction set in this period nowadays. And quite enough of it shares some of this ones themes. Sadly, I found this not the best written nor the most believable. A pleasant enough listen but nothing great...

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2 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    2 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

A tedious vanity project

If this book wasn’t for you, who do you think might enjoy it more?

People who like historical fiction, but are very easily pleased. By chapter 12 I'd endured all I could of this self indulgent twaddle and returned it to Audible. I'm sorry to have to give it just 1 out of 5 but I couldn't find a single redeemable feature in those dozen chapters. If you like sublime historical novels such as 'Q' or 'Altai' by the Wu Ming/Luther Blisset collective or Umberto Eco then you'll hate this book. If you find Ellis Peters, Dan Brown or David Gibbins harmless then it's worth a look.

Would you ever listen to anything by Bruce Holsinger again?

Never.

How did the narrator detract from the book?

It would be easy to be too harsh on the narrator who tries manfully to cope with the challenges of this book's shortfalls, but he just doesn't have the tools. When you combine his ropey cockney with the absolutely mangled vernacular of the commoners it is just an irritating garble; his off-the-shelf approximations of Spanish and Italian 'accents' are no better, but the most irritating is the voice he uses for ALL noblemen and courtiers, which is EXACTLY like Peter Cook's Olivier-channelled Richard III from the first series of Black Adder, perhaps with a hint of Brian Blessed's random shoutiness.

If you could play editor, what scene or scenes would you have cut from A Burnable Book?

It's interesting that this question mentions editor and scenes, because the book did feel more like a screenplay; it's very heavy on dialogue and the intervening stuff is perfunctory, being more like stage/set directions than descriptive prose. The specific scenes of this book are far from being its Achilles heal.

Any additional comments?

As other reviewers have noted, there are too many characters. In a print book you maybe stand a chance of keeping abreast of them all, but in an audiobook, especially with language as mangled and pretentious as this (see below), and with such a limited palate of accents from the narrator (see above), you have no chance - it's all just bewildering and you repeatedly glaze over and cease caring.

But the biggest problem lies with the fact that the author is an academic historian. You may think this would be an asset for a historical novel and you'd be right, if the academic knowledge and enthusiasm were used judiciously to enhance the narrative with some authentic atmosphere.David Milch, for example, who created the stunning TV show Deadwood shows how this balance can be successful, combining beautifully written Shakespearian soliliquies but suffused with effing and blinding. Why? Because if Deadwood had used the x-rated language of the period it would have sounded quaint and underpowered to our modern ears - being 'authentic' would have completely undermined the force of the narrative. To Milch, storytelling was more important than authenticity.

In this novel however, the author parades their geeky familiarity with the language of 14th century London, cramming into the dialogue as many references and slang as possible, which is utterly obtrusive and overwhelms and suffocates the narrative (the same goes for the descriptions of London which seem just too jarringly and consciously well-researched to disappear into the backdrop). It is a vanity project for the academic who lectures on historical fiction, and thus fails to entertain. Chaucer does not lend himself to writing page turning mysteries, and trying far too hard to emulate his style in writing a modern novel may appeal to Chaucer fans who will admire the author's skill in replicating it, but to the ordinary reader who wants to be entertained by a a good mystery, it simply kills it. Less is more, too much 'authenticity' is just incongruous.

When you combine this with the narrator, it makes the audiobook insufferable to listen to - it sounds like a cod Name of the Rose written by Stanley Unwin and narrated by John Sessions in maximum mugging mode.

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7 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    2 out of 5 stars

Slightly disappointing

Any additional comments?

The premise of this book sounds great but I just couldn't get into as much as I thought I would. Didn't particularly like any of the characters and could have done with a fair bit of editing as some chapters just seemed to drag on and on, and then others felt really rushed.

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  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

very bad book and not worth listening too

Did not like the book and deleted it I would not recommend this book to any one

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