The Heaven Tree Trilogy: The Heaven Tree, The Green Branch, The Scarlet Seed

by Edith Pargeter

The Heaven Tree (Collections and Selections — 1-3)

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The tale of Harry Talvace, stone carver, who lived on the volatile, hotly disputed Welsh border in the 13th century.

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Edith Pargeter’s Heaven Tree Trilogy is special historical fiction. There is no other way to say it.

The story follows Harry Talvace, a norman aristocrat who eschews his heritage to pursue his passion as a stonemason. Talvace is hired by the Marcher lord Ralf Isambard to build a cathedral on his estates bordering Wales. The seemingly brutal Isambard is both in awe and at the same time jealous of the grace and talent of the supposedly lesser man, who also happens to have captured the admiration of Isambard’s Venetian mistress Madonna Benedetta (another excellent character). A fateful love triangle ensues, inevitably leading to tragedy, and to the greater story of vengeance and ultimate redemption beautifully played out in the second show more and third volumes (the Green Branch and the Scarlet Seed).

Readers familiar with the Cadfael mysteries written under the Pargeter's nom de plume, Ellis Peters, will find the Heaven Tree Trilogy different in tone. It is grittier, more dense, perhaps more profound, and just as excellent to my mind. As with her other work, Pargeter portrays the historic period in vivid and loving detail. Her prose and characters are superb and a standard against which I measure all historic fiction.

I first came across the Heaven Tree Trilogy in the early 90s when living in London. I have revisited it several times since.

Very, very highly recommended.
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The first book in the trilogy, The Heaven Tree, tells the story of master stonemason Harry Talvace as he is hired by Ralf Isambard to build him a great cathedral at Parfois along the Welsh Marches. Isambard also brings courtesan Benedetta along with him as mistress, although he is unaware that Benedetta bears a lifelong unrequited love for Harry. Harry makes a desperate choice to save a child from hanging that has dire consequences for himself, his wife and Benedetta, although Harry returns to his commitment to complete the cathedral despite the sentence of a traitor's death hanging over him.

The Green Branch, the second book in the trilogy takes up the story of Master Harry's son (also called Harry) who has been raised in Wales as a show more foster son to Prince Llewellyn. Harry is unknowingly drawn into the adulterous affair between Llewellyn's wife Joan (also known as Joanna) and William de Braose, and as a result of the scandal Harry flees Llewellyn's court and heads to Parfois to enact his revenge against Isambard for his father's death, but fifteen year old Harry is no match for Isambard and is taken prisoner. Ralph refuses to ransom Harry back to his family, and eventually the hatred that first existed between the two sworn enemies develops into something very different and unexpected to both men.

In the final book, The Scarlet Seed, Harry continues to learn the masonry craft of his father whilst still being held prisoner by Isambard. Desperate to free Harry, Benedetta offers Isambard another hostage, one he cannot refuse, but a choice unacceptable to Benedetta's servant John the Fletcher. John makes an attempt on Ralph's life that takes a tragic turn, and as a consequence the jailer now becomes the prisoner in his own home. As the Marches explode into civil war, the Welsh storm the unassailable Parfois and the fates of Isambard, Madonna Benedetta and Master Harry are forever entwined through eternity.

While the start of The Heaven Tree may be a bit too slow paced for some readers, Pargeter's beautiful prose and lyrical writing is one to sit back and slowly savor like a fine red wine or chocolate (or both!!) and I highly recommend this for any lover of medieval fiction. It's not quite as perfect a read for me as Penman's Here Be Dragons, but pretty darn close, and that final scene in the cathedral between Isambard, Benedetta and Master Harry (I'm not telling!) was nothing short of perfection. Five stars.
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Historical novelist Edith Pargeter has an extraordinary ability to capture a personality and foreshadow plot developments in a passage of physical description. Here are a few sentences from a much longer description of Ralf Isambard (gripping from start to finish), from his first appearance in The Heaven Tree, the first novel in the trilogy:

"He wore his hair in the older fashion, squarely cut, with a fringe over his forehead, but it was such a great forehead that it was not dwarfed; and his brows, of a brown darker than the hair, were long and level, and all but met over the long, straight nose. Sunk deep into his head, in great, shadowy sockets, his eyes stared forth restlessly questioning, measuring, assessing, dissecting, fastening show more with famished intelligence upon everything that came within their sight. Disquieting eyes they were, illusionless yet eager, calm yet full of a smoky secret rage, brilliant yet melancholy; and they were beautiful. His face was clean-shaven, and burned to a deep tan which he had certainly never acquired in France, nor in the England he claimed as his country."

As both protector and nemesis to Adam, the cathedral-building protagonist, Isambard will drive the plot of the trilogy, which unfolds with every bit of the intensity and conflict foreshadowed in this description.

Edith Pargeter is the real name of the woman who wrote the "Brother Cadfael" mystery series under the name Ellis Peters. Her more literary work is underappreciated, and The Heaven Tree Trilogy is the very best of it.
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Wonderful historical novel set in the Welsh border lands during the reigns of Llywellyn I and King John in the 13th century. The author weaves her theme of betrayal, revenge, exile and reconciliation and redemption throughout the stories at various levels of the society. It's a captivating book -- especially the growth of the relationship between Ralf Isambard and young Harry Talvace.
I have only read The Heaven Tree so far. It is the story of Henry Talvace, a young man of high ideals in a world where they are not welcome. It takes place in the 1200s near Shrewsbury, England and focuses on his dedication and genius in architecture, specifically the style known as Free Leaf. His heart's desire is to build a church of his own design, and he is given that chance when he meets up with Lord Isambard, a noble with holdings on the border country of Wales and England. However, Isambard is an exacting master who does not take well to being disobeyed, and although their natures have many likenesses, the differences will tear them apart when their ideals clash.
An excellent story. Personally, I enjoyed the bits about the show more building of the church the most, although Pargeter makes the times come alive as well. She manages to show how horrible some aspects of life were without making you dredge through the muck. She also shows how lovely some aspects of life were as well. I did not find myself really drawn to any of the characters, but this might be my state of mind more than the author's writing. It certainly moved me at the end of the story, and I couldn't put it down until I was finished at one o'clock in the morning. Finished this book 7-15-14. show less
Pargeter well known as writer of Cadfael - found this at the Bookery in Placerville (je pense) around 2002 - best guess from papers within - still to read 5.5.20
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Ellis Peters is the pseudonym for Edith Pargeter, who was born in Horsehay, Shropshire. She was a chemist's assistant from 1933 to 1940 and participated during World War II in the Women's Royal Navy Service. The name "Ellis Peters" was adopted by Edith Pargeter to clearly mark a division between her mystery stories and her other work. Her brother show more was Ellis and Petra was a friend from Czechoslovakia, thus the name. She came to writing mysteries, she says, "after half a lifetime of novel-writing." Her detective fiction features well-rounded, knowledgeable characters with whom the reader can empathize. Her most famous literary creation is the medieval monk Brother Cadfael. The blend of history and the formula of the detective story gives Peters's works their popular appeal. As detective hero, Brother Cadfael remains faithful to the requirements of the formula, yet the historical milieu in which he operates is both fully realized and well textured. Peters received the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award in 1963 and the Crime Writers Association's Silver Dagger Award in 1981. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Heaven Tree Trilogy: The Heaven Tree, The Green Branch, The Scarlet Seed
Original title
Heaven tree trilogy omnibus
Original publication date
1993
People/Characters
Harry Talvace; Rolf Islambard; Madonna Benedetta; Owen ap Ivor ap Madoc; Adam; Llewelyn ap Iowerth, Prince of Wales
Important places
Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, UK; Wales, UK
First words
The angel, eternally alighting with arched wings and delicate, stretched feet, spread his hands palms outwards towards the radiance, and bowed in ceremonious humility the youthful, narrow head, with it's long gold hair still ... (show all)erect and quivering from his flight.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Placid and green the Welsh shore invited him.   Behind him the small, stubborn, constant bell had resumed its indomitable chiming.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mystery
DDC/MDS
823.912Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991901-1945
LCC
PR6031 .A49 .H43Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1900-1960

Statistics

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514
Popularity
58,323
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (4.30)
Languages
Dutch, English, French
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4
ASINs
2