Masters of Mystery – Dame Frevisse

   

Margaret (Gail) Frazer, the author of the Dame Frevisse Mysteries and the Joliffe Player Mysteries (both set in medieval England), died last week at age 66, after a long fight with breast cancer.  In honor of her legacy, here’s my post from 2011 (with some updating) about her amateur sleuth, Dame Frevisse.  Enjoy!

 

Welcome to Masters of Mystery Monday, where we feature a fictional detective and examine his or her unique contribution to mystery fiction.  This week:

Margaret Frazer’s Dame Frevisse


 

Some interesting facts about Margaret Frazer and the Sister Frevisse series:

1.  The setting for the series is mid-15th century England, in the Benedictine cloister of St. Frideswide.  Dame (a designation, similar to “Sister”) Frevisse is a devoted nun with a sharp mind and a worldly eye for sin.  This is the time of King Henry VI, and the connections are plentiful:  Frevisse’s uncle by marriage, after all, is Thomas Chaucer, son of the famous Geoffrey Chaucer.  Most of the mysteries are locally-centered, but some involve national interest and political backstabbing, too.

2. “Margaret Frazer” was originally a writing team, made up of Mary Monica Pulver and Gail Frazer.  They co-wrote the first six Sister Frevisse books; then Pulver grew tired of the series and Gail Frazer took over solo, writing eleven more.

3.  There are 17 books in the series, starting with The Novice’s Tale (1992), and the last being The Apostate’s Tale (2008).  The titles come from/are loosely connected to Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales.

4.  A character in the Dame Frevisse books, Joliffe the traveling player, became the central character in his own series (with “Play” in the titles rather than “Tale”), of which there are 7.

5.  Margaret Frazer has won a Herodotus Award (given by The Historical Mystery Appreciation Society for excellence in the field of mystery writing) and has been nominated several times for an Edgar Award (given by Mystery Writers of America).

 

 

15thc Pontifical Mass. Image via wikimedia commons (CC).
15thc Pontifical Mass. Image via wikimedia commons (CC).

 

Why we like the Sister Frevisse series:

1.  Period detail: just the right touch of casual reference that conveys the time period, without being in-your-face.  Here’s a sample, from The Widows’s Tale:

There was a month yet to the beginning of harvest but everything promised a good year for the nunnery, and Dame Frevisse – taking her turn again as hosteler, in charge of the nunnery’s guesthall and guests – took pleasure in the days going simply past in a quiet flow of duties and the eight daily Offices of prayers and psalms.

2.  A well-plotted puzzle, with twists along the way.

3.  Although these nuns have taken vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, they’ve never taken vows against gossiping, grudges, and pettinesss.  Plenty of human frailties abound.

4.  Frevisse is an interesting, complex protagonist, who struggles with her own weaknesses.  Often it is those weaknesses which help her get closer to the solution.

Here’s a book trailer of The Murderer’s Tale:

 

 

Great sites for more info:

Margaret Frazer, “On the Joys of Research”

Margaret Frazer’s site

Cozy Mystery List – Margaret Frazer

Mystery Fanfare

 

Have you read the Sister Frevisse series?  Do you have a favorite historical period you like to read about?  I’d love to hear from you.

Until next time,

Kathy



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8 thoughts on “Masters of Mystery – Dame Frevisse”

  1. Tiffany A WhiteTiffany A White

    As a Catholic girl, I must admit that I’m interested in this series! I had never heard of it before now….as always, thanks, Kathy!

    09/14/2011
  2. Kerry MeachamKerry Meacham

    I haven’t heard of this series Kathy. I’ll have to check it out. Thanks.

    09/15/2011
  3. Margot KinbergMargot Kinberg

    Kathy – Thanks for re-posting this. Margaret Frazer really was talented and we lost her too soon. And I like the ‘period’ feel of this series very much too. Frazer ‘did her homework’ without overburdening readers with detail I think.

    02/11/2013
  4. Kassandra LambKassandra Lamb

    I have read maybe a third of this series. I should track down the rest of them. I love mysteries set in medieval times! So sorry to hear Margaret Frazer has died.

    02/11/2013
  5. Debra EveDebra Eve

    This is series has been on my radar for ages! Now I must check it out…

    02/12/2013
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