Secret Murder: Who Shall Judge? - Paperback
Secret Murder: Who Shall Judge? - Paperback
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by Ellen Kuhfeld (Author)
In the days of old, life could be cheap. Death, however, could be very expensive. "There is one problem. And here he comes, at this very moment." Yes, Thorolf Pike was trouble. Declared an outlaw and exiled from his home, he had come from Surtsheim, where his fellow Norsemen lived, to Northlanding, where English settlers lived. Now he was dead, by an unknown hand. Who killed him? And, should the murderer be judged by English law, or by Norse law for the crime of secret murder? What if, in the middle ages, North America had been settled by Europeans? The Americas would have developed very differently. Settlers from an eleventh-century Europe would have been on a relatively even footing with the local people, whom the Norse called Skraelings. We could end up with an Anglo-French empire along the Mississippi up to the head of navigation at Saint Anthony Falls. North of that would be Norse, settling on the Iron Range; and north of the Norse, Finns. Large areas of North America would still belong to the Skraelings. Traders would travel about, by land and by river, as traders always have. At trade fairs, men and women of different lands, laws, and customs would come together. As always, jackals would gather to prey upon them....
Author Biography
I got a BS at MIT, an MS and PhD at the University of Minnesota. Then, having equipped myself for life as a nuclear physicist, I ran away and joined the museum world. I simply could not stand scholarly writing, which must be in the passive voice. Eventually, I ended up as curator at The Bakken Library and Museum in Minneapolis. Since graduating I've sold a number of stories, quite a few articles, and one novel. I'm working on a book about the history of electricity, expanding on columns written for the IEEE journal Engineering in Medicine and Biology. Now that I'm retired, I have more time to write. I've published my novel, and have been collaborating with a friend on short stories and poetry. Been selling them, too. And I've taken up bookbinding as a hobby. This retirement stuff ain't bad!