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Tombland (The Shardlake series)

Autor C.J. Sansom

Editorial PAN MACMILLAN

Tombland (The Shardlake series)
-5% dto.    15,00€
14,25€
Ahorra 0,75€
Disponibilidad limitada, recíbelo en 7 días. Uno de nuestros libreros lo conseguirá para ti.
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  • Editorial PAN MACMILLAN
  • ISBN13 9781447284505
  • ISBN10 144728450X
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 880
  • Idioma Inglés

Tombland (The Shardlake series)

Autor C.J. Sansom

Editorial PAN MACMILLAN

-5% dto.    15,00€
14,25€
Ahorra 0,75€
Disponibilidad limitada, recíbelo en 7 días. Uno de nuestros libreros lo conseguirá para ti.
Envío gratis a partir de 19€
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

As always, Sansom conjures the atmosphere, costumes and smells of Tudor London with vigour, from the gilded halls of Whitehall Palace to the dungeons of the Tower . . . A shocking climax promises to mark a new chapter for Shardlake, and for England -- Observer on Lamentation Shardlake's back and better than ever . . . Lamentation, like its predecessors, is a triumph both as detective fiction and as a novel -- Independent on Sunday on Lamentation When it comes to intriguing Tudor-based narratives, Hilary Mantel has a serious rival . . . A Scottish historian who had a career in law before turning to fiction, Sansom finds an ideal protagonist in Matthew Shardlake, the humane hunchbacked lawyer-sleuth, in his Tudor novels * Sunday Times * With the Shardlake series . . . Sansom has surely established himself as one of the best novelists around * Spectator *

Tombland is the seventh novel in C. J. Sansom's number one bestselling Shardlake series. Summer, 1549. Two years after the death of Henry VIII, England is sliding into chaos . . . The nominal king, Edward VI, is eleven years old. His uncle Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, rules as Protector. The extirpation of the old religion by radical Protestants is stirring discontent among the populace while the Protector's prolonged war with Scotland is proving a disastrous failure and threatens to involve France. Worst of all, the economy is in collapse, inflation rages and rebellion is stirring among the peasantry. Since the old King's death, Matthew Shardlake has been working as a lawyer in the service of Henry's younger daughter, the Lady Elizabeth. The gruesome murder of Edith Boleyn, the wife of John Boleyn - a distant Norfolk relation of Elizabeth's mother - which could have political implications for Elizabeth, brings Shardlake and his assistant Nicholas Overton to the summer assizes at Norwich. There they are reunited with Shardlake's former assistant Jack Barak. The three find layers of mystery and danger surrounding Edith's death, as a second murder is committed. And then East Anglia explodes, as peasant rebellion breaks out across the country. The yeoman Robert Kett leads a force of thousands in overthrowing the landlords and establishing a vast camp outside Norwich. Soon the rebels have taken over the city, England's second largest. Barak throws in his lot with the rebels; Nicholas, opposed to them, becomes a prisoner in Norwich Castle; while Shardlake has to decide where his ultimate loyalties lie, as government forces in London prepare to march north and destroy the rebels. Meanwhile he discovers that the murder of Edith Boleyn may have connections reaching into both the heart of the rebel camp and of the Norfolk gentry . . . Includes an Historical Essay from the author on Reimagining Kett's Rebellion.

 










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