Saturday, 4 June 2011

Week 23 - Labyrinth: a hard puzzle to crack! (Book 27)

This week saw me finishing Labyrinth by Kate Mosse. It's an epic tale set in the same location (around Carcassone in France) but in two different times - 2005 and the 1200's. In contemporary times, Alice goes on an archaeological dig and finds a cave containing, among other things, two skeletons, a labyrinth pattern on the wall, a stone ring and a small leather bag - after which, everybody seems out to get her and why does she keep getting that deja vu feeling? Eight hundred years earlier, amidst the frightening crusade to stamp out heresy in southern France, a young woman named Alais is given a ring and a book for safe-keeping by her father - after which, everyone seems to be out to get her .... These women's lives are linked across the centuries and we journey with each of them separately (really enjoyed the medieval stuff best) until we come to an almighty bringing together of all the strands back in the cave from the start of the book. Full of peril and mystery and herculean efforts to keep the secret of the "true grail" hidden from those who would misuse it, this is a story that definitely keeps you turning the page. Who can you trust? What were the Cathars up to? I was really enjoying it (maybe because I have been on holiday in the area it is set and was picturing the places mentioned) until quite near the end, when I started to find things had got a little confusing and blurry. Maybe it could have done with a bit of editing to tighten it up - or maybe it was just me. On the whole, an enjoyable but not totally satisfying read as I left it not quite 100% sure if I'd got all that I should have out of it.     

My star rating is 3.5.

The stats bit:
Length: 702 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.00 (PDSA charity shop).
Other formats available in: Print; abridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.

1 comment:

  1. I've listened to this in unabridged audio book format and really enjoyed it .. probably for very similar reasons. C has shown an interest so it could very probably be the book we listen to on our epic journey this weekend.

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