| More reads from Martin Walker and James Runcie |
The Grantchester Mysteries feature now Archdeacon Sidney Chambers as amateur sleuth and Anglican priest. In this newest installment, Sidney Chambers and the Dangers of Temptation, the 1960s are drawing to a close and world events are drawing Sidney, his family and friends, and society into a new era. As with the earlier books, Sidney is struggling to balance his pastoral duties with his curiosity with crime and assisting his friend Detective Keating with his cases, add to that the pressures of marriage and fatherhood and now you have a character who is forever evolving and never growing boring.
Reading a story that takes place around the time I was a small child gives me a glimpse of what the world was like as I cannot remember those events for I was not yet three when the men walked on the moon. Most notably in this installment of the series, for me at least, was the episode dealing with homosexuality and the legal system in England. In earlier books, Sidney's curate Leonard, is portrayed as struggling with his sexuality, but in this book he has finally met the right person and has fallen in love. Unfortunately, even though homosexuality is no longer a punishable offense, the Church of England hasn't come to grips with the issue nor have many people in society. Leonard is faced with the difficult decision to come out when faced with blackmail. Sidney in his ever caring and thoughtful way gives support to Leonard and instructs the reader about the capacity of God's love. I won't spoil the outcome for you, only know that we are finally making strides today to be inclusive of all.
In contrast, Bruno Courreges, lives very much in our present time, but history has a way of impacting life and one can't always out run its influence. The Children Return focuses on a young autistic man, Sami, from Bruno's village who had disappeared from a local Mosque school and surfaces in Afghanistan. In spite of his disability, or rather as a result of his unique gifts, Sami is in fact a notorious bomb maker wanted by many governments for the deaths of many military personnel. As the book unfolds we are told of the brutality Sami witnessed and suffered in his home country of Algeria and of the impact that the violent struggle that occurred when fighting for independence from France had on him and others. Martin has explored this issue in other books as well. Now as an adult, Sami has been used by others in their violent struggles. Here too I will not spoil the outcome of the story for you, only to say that terrorists are not born they are made. Children who are witness to brutality or suffer from bullying or abuse will have their personalities altered by the experience and some may grow up to be abusers themselves either on a small scale in their own circle or on a larger world level.
No comments:
Post a Comment