Exciting historical thriller series continues

A Grave for a Thief (Company of Rogues #3) by Douglas Skelton    

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️



Jonas Flynt! Once more mired in the machinations of Colonel Nathaniel Charters. As he’s reminded obliquely by Charters, his life is in the Colonel’s hands. Hang for highway robbery or work for Charters. Unknown to all but a few Charters “commands a small company known as the Company of Rogues…to be used either as informants or agents in defence of king and country.”

Charters is a spymaster. For Jonas, in the end I think it’s a matter of his choice to continue with Charters. Jonas is a man of integrity, despite his history of wrong doing.

It’s 1716. Working for the Company he’s trying to find a witness to the machinations of the Fellowship. This is a group of powerful men who remain hidden in the shadows, playing the long game. Placing men in powerful positions to do what the Fellowship wants, which is a world bending to their desires. Untold wealth and influence at home and abroad. 

Illegitimate Jonas has already killed his lordly father, a degenerate. His half brother, Lord James Moncrieff, a member of the Fellowship, (who desires to be the Grand Master) wants revenge. Jonas finds he needs to head north to discover the whereabouts of the witness. It’s a long and tortuous trek, leading to a deranged lord. Jonas finds himself embroiled in a seperate plot of Moncrieff’s, and needed help comes from friend Gabriel Cain. Help or what? Jonas is puzzled! Although his best friend, something seems a little off about Gabriel.

Before the tale ends, Jonas is beaten and near hanged. Bodies litter the ground behind him.

An intriguing historical thriller that takes us through the stews of London, and on into even more dangerous territory.

I kept thinking about Jonas and the atmosphere, the edge of things, the picture beyond the action,  long after I’d finished. Why? I guess the plight of the anti hero appealed to me. And then there’s Jonas’ reactions to rats! Ugh!


A Canelo ARC via NetGalley.                                              

Many thanks to the author and publisher.

Please note: Quotes taken from an advanced reading copy maybe subject to change

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Things aren’t as they seem!

Women in war—Internment by the Japanese 1942-45.

Darkness and passion in 1750's Venice.