Sansom has in fact written five novels thus far, but four of them, Dissolution, Dark Fire,Sovereign, and Revelation, all in the Matthew Shardlake series focus on the Cromwellian period of English history (and its aftermath) of the late 1530s early 1540 as Henry the VIII’s reign wound down.
These novels have all emerged in the last five years (2004 to the present) and are available around the globe by various publishers (Pan down under, Penguin in the U.K. and around here). If one were to compare these novels to other medieval series, of course they are most like the novels of PC. Doherty. The real progenitor of these sorts of mysteries however was the late beloved Ellis Peters. Peters focused on life in a monastery and she tended to avoid the seemier side of things in her descriptions of things. Her prose is the most elegant of those who have written in this genre (some of you may have come across the TV versions of her work— the Brother Cadfael series).
What makes Sansom’s novels stand out is they are written from the perspective of a lawyer. Matthew Shardlake is a man who used to be an ardent Cromwellian Reformer, but becomes disillusioned when he sees all the hideous things the Reformers were party to in the 1537-1543 period, never mind the machinations of Henry the VIII and his multitudinous wives. Of course not everything Henry did was terrible— he did give us Greensleeves, King’s College in Cambridge, and the chartering of my first publisher Cambridge University Press, the oldest continually operating press in the English speaking world. But I digress.
The real strength of Sansom’s writing is detailed historical description of the ordinary life of ordinary people in London and the surrounding areas during a tumultuous period in English history. This was the period of Cranmer and Cromwell and Coverdale when the memory of Sir Thomas More was still fresh, and those today who care about or are interested in the rise of the English Protestant Reformation under Henry’s instigation will find these novels fascinating. Sansom doesn’t gild the lily at all, and so we are regaled with Reforming preachers who are busy condemning every one to Hell (the so called ‘hot Gospelers’) and people who go on killing sprees, in the name of the Lord (the subject of the novel Revelation where a crazed Reformer uses the seven bowls judgments as a pattern for a series of seven murders). These were perilous days for Refomers who could be hauled off to jail by Bishop Bonner in a heartbeat for nothing more than preaching the Gospel on a street corner. Needless to say this is not your momma’s Sunday school literature about how pure the Puritans were.
When you read these novels you can certainly understand why, by the beginning of the 18th century when John Wesley was born (1703), England was sick and tired of religous wars and of killing each other in the name of Christ, and so the watchword of the age was ‘tolerance’. Does that sound familiar? “Plus change plus la meme chose.” This is in turn why Wesley’s revival frightened people. Religious enthusiasm was seen as incendiary and possibly seditious, and England didn’t want to go through more bloodbaths.
One of the most interesting aspects of these Shardlake mysteries, which like all good mysteries, keep you guessing to the end of each novel, is that Sansom does not hesitate to portray the degree to which Christianity played a crucial role in every aspect of life from politics to marriage to trade to the way one dressed. One gets a real feel for the good and bad of what it would be like to have Christian values and concerns involved at every turn in a particular culture. Shardlake himself comes across as an increasingly agnostic or less pious Protestant who is less and less sure it is a good thing for a government to support a particular brand of Christian religion at the expense of others, the major struggle being between the so-called Papists (i.e. Catholics), and various sorts of reforming Protestants who drew their inspiration from Luther and Calvin.
If there is a murder mystery writer to whom Sansom is most indebted other than the ones already mentioned, it would be P.D. James, as these novels share the dark and dank atmosphere of many of James’ novels (try Original Sin if you have not sampled her work). Sansom’s powers of description are excellent, but sometimes the novels get bogged down in detail and the plot drags. This is particularly an issue in the longest of these novels, the most recent one entitled Revelation. Nevertheless, for students of the book of Revelation, this latest novel will prove the most fascinating, for it reveals how earlier eras of Christians read that book (i.e. the Pope is the antichrist, and Dispensational interpretation is nowhere on the horizon).
For those who like their Protestant history lessons sanitized of the seamier side of things, these are not novels for you. For example in the novel entitled Dissolution we learn of the destruction of all the monasteries in England under Cromwell’s iron hand, or in the novel entitled Dark Fire we hear of the prosecution of a young teenage girl (13) for the murder of a boy she did not kill, just because the Bible says a ‘life for a life’. The judge in the case is what we would call ‘a hanging judge’ based on his ardent belief that Biblical law should be the law of England and be imposed even on children. We also are regaled with descriptions of ‘impressment’ which makes the torture of waterboarding look like child’s play.
There is much to be learned from these interesting novels, and in a year in which we celebrate the legacy of Calvin, it might be well to also remember the darker side of that legacy– namely the Michael Servetus side of things. Protestant Geneva was far from Utopia or the kingdom come on earth. If there is a cautionary lesson in these novels it is this– beware of trying to legislate Christianity, or at least beware of using OT law and the book of Revelation as the basis for civil jurisprudence. Caveat Emptor.














posted August 26, 2009 at 1:37 pm
Dear Dr. Witherington,
I first heard you at the Aldersgate Lectures last year in Singapore, the place where I grew up and live in. I found your lectures enlightening and inspiring — to this day, I continue to retell your “how men expect God to be like the Godfather” example to my friends with much poignancy and delight. I would just like to say that as a Christian, I’m very encouraged and relieved that God has given us someone like yourself to defend the veracity of the Scriptures in the midst of so much hatred, confusion and doubt.
I write here actually to ask for your help. I have a friend who attends City Harvest Church in Singapore, who increasingly believes less and less in the veracity of the Scriptures and as a result embraces more of a pluralistic, postmodern outlook. Many of his arguments are highly technical and historical in nature, and area which I lack much knowledge in. This is where I was hoping you could help with your knowledge and expertise. Most of his doubts can found in this link – http://irreligiously.blogspot.com/search/label/Gospels%20–%20are%20they%20reliable%3F – scanning through the posts, you will probably get a good idea of where he’s coming from.
I understand that you’re very busy and may not be able to address these questions… but if you could help to answer his main points, like the fallibility of the Bible because of the fallibility of the witnesses, the fact that no original manuscript of the Gospels were preserved etc.. it would be encouraging not only for him, but for all in the faith here in Singapore.
With love from Singapore,
Alastair
P.S. Do email me or drop a message at my blog if you feel its more appropriate! I’d be greatly honoured.
posted August 26, 2009 at 9:34 pm
Hi Alastair: I’ve already responded to this sort of nonsense on this very blog. Simply look for the reviews of Bart Ehrman’s books Misquoting Jesus, and Jesus Interrupted.
BW3
posted August 26, 2009 at 9:41 pm
Thanks for this, Ben. I’ve ordered the series.
posted August 26, 2009 at 11:34 pm
Your review and description of these novels makes me wish I had more time to read. But I think one of these books could be a good present for a friend who is an avid history buff.
By the way, the French say “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”
posted August 27, 2009 at 4:35 pm
Thanks Bart, I’m sure you are right, but I’ve seen it as written above in ordinary texts and conversations. What you wrote literally reads ‘The more {it) changes, the more it is the same thing’.
BW3
posted August 30, 2009 at 11:05 pm
Sounds like a very engrossing series of novels. Reminds me a bit of the Da VInci Code and I wonder how much fiction is mixed with fact. I imagine the novels are probably a lot closer to the unvarnished truth than many of us would like to think.
How sad, and yet understandable, that our forebears have tried to legislate for rightouesness. They seem to have missed the point that the kingdom of God is within/among you. We might as well be under sharia law, mightn’t we?
posted August 31, 2009 at 3:23 pm
I’m half way through the first novel and am thoroughly enjoying the writing. Thanks again for the recommendation. (All four novels await my devouring.)
posted September 3, 2009 at 6:47 pm
Thanks for the great review Dr. Witherington. I will put this series on my wish list; I wish I could buy them and I wish that I had time to read them. I am currently enjoying your book New Testament Rhetoric. I can’t wait to meet you in person next year.
God Bless,
Jeremy
posted September 4, 2009 at 12:33 pm
Ben,
I’m now on the third book, my wife nearly finished the 2nd and my daughter is beginning the first. They are very good reads. I will blog about the books soon myself, and how the world Sansom describes of angry men and their angry god remind me of much of the discourse that takes place on the nanonodes of blogdom.