The death of a humble clergyman in 1877 leads amateur
sleuths Violet Paget and John Singer Sargent into a medieval world of saints
and kings—including the legendary Arthur—as they follow a trail of relics and antiquities
lost since the destruction of Glastonbury Abbey in 1539. Written in alternating
chapters between the two time periods, The
Spoils of Avalon creates a sparkling, magical mystery that bridges the gap
between two worlds that could hardly be more different—the industrialized,
Darwinian, materialistic Victorian Age and the agricultural, faith-infused life
of a medieval abbey on the brink of violent change at the hands of Henry VIII
and Thomas Cromwell.
First in a new series of historical mysteries, The Spoils of Avalon introduces two
unlikely detectives and life-long friends—beginning the series with the two as young people on the
verge of making their names famous for the next several decades throughout
Europe and America: the brilliant and
brittle Violet Paget, known as the writer Vernon Lee, and the talented, genial
portrait painter John Singer Sargent.
Friends from the age of ten, Paget and Sargent frequently
met in the popular European watering places and capitals, frequenting the same
salons and drawing rooms in London, Rome, Paris, Florence, Venice, Vienna and
Madrid. Both were possessed of keen minds and bohemian tendencies, unorthodox
educations and outsized egos (especially Paget). Their instant, natural bonding
led them to address each other as “Twin”, and they corresponded frequently when
they were apart. Henry James once described Violet Paget as
having “the most formidable mind” of their times, and he was an active fan and
patron of John Sargent, introducing him to London society and his own inner
circles of literary and artistic genius.
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