Prince: John Shakespeare 3
By (Author) Rory Clements
Hodder & Stoughton
Hodder Paperback
14th February 2012
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Short-listed for CWA Ellis Peters Historical Award 2011 (UK)
Paperback
448
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 29mm
301g
Spring 1593. England is a powder keg of rumour and fear. Plague rages, famine is rife, the ageing Queen's couriers scheme: Elizabeth's Golden Age is truly tarnished. Meanwhile Spain watches and waits - and plots.
Into this turmoil a small cart clatters through the streets of London, carrying a deadly load. It is the first in a wave of horrific bombing attacks on the Dutch immigrant community that will change John Shakespeare's life for ever.Driven on by cold rage, Shakespeare's investigations will take him from magnificent royal horseraces to the opulent chambers of Black Luce's brothel, from the theatrical underworld of Marlowe and Kyd to the pain-wracked torture cells of priest-hunter Richard Topcliffe, and from the elegant offices of master tactician Robert Cecil to the splintering timbers of an explosive encounter at sea.As Shakespeare delves ever deeper, he uncovers intricate layers of mystery and deception that threaten the heart not only of the realm, but of all that he holds dear.PRAISE FOR THE JOHN SHAKESPEARE SERIES
'A cracking plot full of twists right up to the last minute. I look forweard to the next' - Sunday ExpressBeautifully done . . . alive and tremendously engrossing - Daily TelegraphA colourful history lesson . . . exciting narrative twists - Sunday TelegraphEnjoyable, bloody and brutish - GuardianAn engrossing thriller - Washington PostAn excellent debut - Publishers WeeklyThis is a historical thriller to send a shiver down your spine . . . atmospheric - the evocation of the filth and debauchery of London is quite exceptional. Clements demonstrates the compelling eye for detail and character that Bernard Cornwell so memorably brought to Rifleman Sharpe . . . I could not tear myself away, it is that good - Daily MailPRAISE FOR PRINCE'A genuine page turner, and cleverly weaves in real historical events and personalities. Fans will not be disappointed' - Eastern Daily PressAfter a career in national newspapers, Rory Clements now lives in a seventeenth-century farmhouse in Norfolk and writes full time. When not immersing himself in the Elizabethan world, he enjoys village life and a game of tennis with friends. He is married to the artist Naomi Clements-Wright.