Jeri
Westerson wrote fifteen mysteries about Crispin Guest, the social pariah and
former English knight who in 1383 strikes out on a new career as a private
investigator. Now she has given her attention to the court of Henry VIII, which
one might think has been thoroughly explored. However, Westerson has turned the
slight historical references to
Will Somers, the court jester, into a real person and the center of a new
mystery series.
In the second book
The Twilight Queen, to be released in January by Severn House, some time
has lapsed since Will’s debut. The court is in a quiet uproar, as Henry is
losing interest in Anne Boleyn, the woman he defied the Catholic Church to
marry. Anne has failed to produce a son, and Henry is starting to look around
the court for her replacement, a scant three years after their marriage. Some
are pleased, as Anne made enemies on her way up and they are eager to engineer
her downfall. Others, like Will Somers, are appalled at Henry’s treatment of
his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and now fear a similar fate, or worse, is
waiting for Anne.
Within this hot
bed of political treachery, Anne issues an urgent summons to Will. He finds her
in her chambers, where she shows him a dead man near her bed. She doesn’t know
him and believes the body has been placed in her room to discredit her with the
king. She begs Will to take him away and find out who is trying to damage her reputation.
Thus Will embarks on his second investigation.
Will is a
fascinating character with an innate sense of fairness and decency. He tries to
persuade Henry not to abandon Anne so readily, drawing the wrath of some of
Anne’s enemies who are working to remove her. Westerson has drawn a vivid and
frightening portrait of a court ruled by an unstable egomaniac, where anyone
within the king’s sphere could be knighted or beheaded with equal ease and with
as little cause.
Will has a far
more adventurous love life than a respectably married man should have. The book
is as much about his romances as it is about his budding career as a detective.
His long-suffering wife holds her own in their marriage, as well as any woman
could at that time. How their relationship evolves will be interesting to watch
as the series unfolds.
For fans of well-written and well-researched
historical mysteries. Recommended.
·
Publisher: Severn House; Main edition (January 2,
2024)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 224 pages
·
ISBN-10: 1448310903
· ISBN-13: 978-1448310906
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2023
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works
on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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