Available Formats
These Wicked Devices
By (Author) Matthew Plampin
HarperCollins Publishers
The Borough Press
1st November 2025
3rd July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction based on or inspired by true events
Narrative theme: Politics
Biographical fiction / autobiographical fiction
Classic fiction: general and literary
Hardback
384
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 27mm
270g
THE ETERNAL CITY IS NO PLACE FOR MERCY'Matthew Plampin should rank with the best' Sunday Times'Plampin is heartbreakingly good' The Times
Rome, 1650.
The streets are teeming as thousands of pilgrims flood in for the Holy Jubilee, but behind the gilded faade of the Vatican, power is unravelling.
Donna Olimpia Maidalchini has long kept Pope Innocent X under her thumb, but as loyalties shift, her enemies close in. And her most dangerous opponents may be those she deems too weak to matter.
Two destitute nuns arrive, fleeing the ruined city of Castro and each carrying secrets that could destroy them.
Meanwhile, the assistant to the famed Spanish artist Diego Velzquez is drawn into a perilous conspiracy one that could bring Italy to its knees, and against which his own desperate ambitions seem to count for nothing.
As the sweltering summer heat rises, survival, not salvation, becomes the ultimate goal and in this world of sin, saints almost never survive.
Praise for Mrs Whistler:
Matthew Plampin is heartbreakingly good Mrs Whistler is a beguiling glimpse of a fascinating world THE TIMES
A terrific novel It springs off the page, bristling with life. A vivid and absorbing portrait of bohemian London and the love affair between Whistler and his long-suffering but spirited muse DEBORAH MOGGACH
A captivating tale This novel is a delight THE TIMES
A delightful book LITERARY REVIEW
'Should rank with the best his work possesses depth and vitality vividly engaging a novel that conjures up the Victorian art world in rich colours SUNDAY TIMES
A richly imagined historical novel, full of depth and vitality SUNDAY TIMES CULTURE
Matthew Plampin was born in 1975 and lives in London. He completed a PhD at the Courtauld Institute of Art and now lectures on nineteenth-century art and architecture. He is the author of two previous novels, The Street Philosopher and The Devils Acre