It is 733 AD in Anglo-Saxon Britain - a time of warriors, war and
religious extremes.
Begiloc, a young freedman from Wimborne, is a man of action. But his
world turns upside down when the young Briton and his best friend Meryn
are ordered away to protect English missionaries in Germany.
For a man accustomed to brutality, Begiloc has a soft spot for the
purple-tinged mountains, waterfalls, lakes, animals, trees and flowers -
beginning to muse whether they, rather than Man, do not better embody
the essence of God.
Mission follows mission across the continent, and Begiloc is driven ever
further from his loved ones. His ultimate foe is the corrupt and cruel
Bishop of Rems, Milo.
Will Begiloc ever be free from his obligations to the Church, and
reunited with those whom he has been so long separated?
John Broughton's The Purple Thread is a historical thrill-ride across
8th century Europe, which also rings some very contemporary bells, and a
tale of a man's psychological battle to sustain his faith and morality
in the face of temptation and evil.