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The Seeker (2015)

di S.G. MacLean

Serie: Damian Seeker (1)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1454187,110 (3.78)15
WINNER OF THE 2015 CWA ENDEAVOUR HISTORICAL DAGGER London, 1654. Oliver Cromwell is at the height of his power and has declared himself Lord Protector. Yet he has many enemies, at home and abroad. London is a complex web of spies and merchants, priests and soldiers, exiles and assassins. One of the web's most fearsome spiders is Damian Seeker, agent of the Lord Protector. No one knows where Seeker comes from, who his family is, or even his real name. All that is known of him for certain is that he is utterly loyal to Cromwell, and that nothing can be long hidden from him. In the city, coffee houses are springing up, fashionable places where men may meet to plot and gossip. Suddenly they are ringing with news of a murder. John Winter, hero of Cromwell's all-powerful army, is dead, and the lawyer, Elias Ellingworth, found standing over the bleeding body, clutching a knife. Yet despite the damning evidence, Seeker is not convinced of Ellingworth's guilt. He will stop at nothing to bring the killer to justice: and Seeker knows better than any man where to search.… (altro)
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Thoroughly enjoyed this crime drama set in the period of the Commonwealth following the triumph of the Parliamentary faction in the English Civil War. It captures well the paranoia that must have been endemic especially in the big cities like Bath and the capital, London, with anyone who voiced the slightest criticism of the regime hauled off to a nasty fate.

The main plotline follows the attempt of Damian Seeker, high up in the Commonwealth's security/spy services to discover who murdered a key player in the regime. Along the way he also has to foil a Royalist plot or two and deal with the dissatisfactions of those who originally backed Parliament's cause but who now are disappointed with the result - only the bosses have changed, instead of the whole of society being made egalitarian.

The interweaving of the storylines of several characters is done very well. The only thing that held this back from being a 5-star read is that we don't fully get into the head of Seeker, a man who has a troubled past but who sometimes comes over as a rather colourless superhero, given his ability to best a professional soldier in a duel with little effort, for example. But a very interesting period of history to use for a crime fiction setting, and I will definitely follow up the sequels. ( )
  kitsune_reader | Nov 23, 2023 |
A politician once said of Germany that it took half the country to control the other half (and he was speaking around 1900, well before either world war). I get the same chilling impression of midseventeenth-century London from The Seeker, a mystery that involves murder, royalist conspiracies, and the terror of speaking one’s mind.

It’s 1654, and after a fractious, savage civil war, Oliver Cromwell has seized power, employing a vast, pervasive spy network to root out anything he considers subversive. His most ubiquitous, feared agent is Damian Seeker, who seems to know whatever you shouldn’t have done, when, and with whom. So if you’ve spoken against the Lord Protector Cromwell’s joyless, repressive regime; longed for the Stuart monarchy to return; written a poem extolling liberty; or merely sat in the same room as someone who’s done any of these, when The Seeker comes for you–and he will–don’t bother to deny a thing. It’s better not to.

However, what makes Seeker more than an extraordinarily energetic, gifted goon is a passion for truth, no matter where it leads. Consequently, when an assassin fells John Winter, a soldier who enjoyed the Lord Protector’s favor and sat in his inner council, it’s more than a security breach. It’s also a murder case, and finding the killer matters, not only because he could strike again, but–well, because. And from the first, Seeker doubts that Elias Ellingworth is the killer, even if he was discovered near Winter’s body, holding the bloody knife, and even if he’s penned seditious pamphlets.

To find the real murderer, Seeker must follow a sinuous trail that quickly branches in several directions, all of which appear to threaten the regime. Coffee houses, the latest fad in London, are the perfect breeding ground for conspiracy, though they’re also places for free conversation on any topic under the sun.

I like how MacLean plays this theme. Cromwell’s followers pretend that they have swept away a tyranny based on birth and replaced it with a temperate government that values merit. But, as Ellingworth insists, the Lord Protector has betrayed the democracy he once professed and instituted a tyranny of his own. That Seeker, a commoner of humble origins, hunts down dissidents to uphold an unjust, autocratic ruler lends the conflict a fitting irony.

Little is known about Seeker’s origins, though, for the man never talks about himself or his feelings, if he even has any. He’s all work. However, Maria Ellingworth, the imprisoned suspect’s sister, interests him, and I doubt I’m giving anything away by saying that the young woman’s naive honesty and directness slowly seep through his defenses. It’s obvious from the get-go, though anything but obvious how it will end.

That’s The Seeker’s greatest strength, I think. Except for a scene or two recounted out of order to withhold a secret, the novel is exceptionally well plotted, no mean trick, given the sheer number of characters. Further, MacLean excels at hiding whether certain key characters are friends or foes, sometimes up until the end.

I could have done without a cliché action or two, as when Seeker holds off his men to battle a traitor in single combat, but that’s a minor quibble. I love the period details, which flow seamlessly through the narrative and lend atmosphere. The language does slip occasionally, though; I’m certain no seventeenth-century Englishman would have ever used the phrase “liaise with.”

Seeker’s also pretty thin as a character, yet he’s the deepest of the lot. Late in the novel–too late, I think–we’re told (not shown) why he’s so loyal to Cromwell, and why he loves order above all. But I’m not entirely persuaded, and I think it would have taken little to establish this in small ways throughout the narrative. Seeker has potential–why is he so fierce, and why does truth matter to him?–but this book doesn’t exploit his inner conflicts. Maybe in future installments, MacLean will show more of him and her other characters. ( )
1 vota Novelhistorian | Jan 31, 2023 |
I found this a hard novel to assess. In most aspects The Seeker is a hugely accomplished and absorbing novel. S.G. MacLean evokes the darkness and paranoia of Cromwell's England with economy and precision, and delivers a neatly plotted murder mystery which dovetails nicely with the political backdrop. However...

...the character of Damian Seeker, the protagonist, seems to come from a different and inferior novel. Seeker is a stereotypically dark and damaged anti-hero we have all come across in fiction many times before. He is attractive to women without realising it, nurses a battered integrity and is never, ever wrong. He can tell infallibly if someone is lying and is, of course, a peerless swordsman. And underneath his forbidding exterior, we find he does have a heart which simply awaits the appropriate prompt...

I have not read any of S.G. MacLean's work before, and there was so much I liked in the book that I will certainly read more, but it may be a while before I sit down with Damian Seeker again. ( )
  TimStretton | Mar 19, 2020 |
London in time of The Protectorate is a complex place. Whilst the Commonwealth under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell has banned theatre etc, the people are still living life as normal regardless of whether there is a king on the throne or a Protector in charge. Meanwhile the Royalists are plotting and spying from their base in The Netherlands. High-ranking Parliamentarian John Winter is brutally murdered in Whitehall, his wife appears innocent even though she is a staunch Royalist, but a plot is feared and intelligencer and enforcer Damian Seeker is tasked with solving the crime. This leads to a web of intrigue involving the Barbados slave trade, coffee houses and an old score to settle from the West Country.

Having read one of MacLean's books before I had high hopes for this series, the setting is relatively unexplored, particularly from the perspective of the Parliamentarians. Usually books focus on the Civil War itself and have a romanticised view of the Royalists, this book explores issues affecting both sides and takes the viewpoint from the common people which is also refreshing. Whilst Damian Seeker is the central character he is quite lightly drawn, probably to be further explored in later instalments, and this is the the benefit of the pace of the novel. Plotting is interesting with multiple strands drawn together and I was particularly interested in the white slave trade aspect as it was something I was relatively unaware of in this period. ( )
  pluckedhighbrow | Jun 26, 2017 |
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WINNER OF THE 2015 CWA ENDEAVOUR HISTORICAL DAGGER London, 1654. Oliver Cromwell is at the height of his power and has declared himself Lord Protector. Yet he has many enemies, at home and abroad. London is a complex web of spies and merchants, priests and soldiers, exiles and assassins. One of the web's most fearsome spiders is Damian Seeker, agent of the Lord Protector. No one knows where Seeker comes from, who his family is, or even his real name. All that is known of him for certain is that he is utterly loyal to Cromwell, and that nothing can be long hidden from him. In the city, coffee houses are springing up, fashionable places where men may meet to plot and gossip. Suddenly they are ringing with news of a murder. John Winter, hero of Cromwell's all-powerful army, is dead, and the lawyer, Elias Ellingworth, found standing over the bleeding body, clutching a knife. Yet despite the damning evidence, Seeker is not convinced of Ellingworth's guilt. He will stop at nothing to bring the killer to justice: and Seeker knows better than any man where to search.

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