
Forgiven (Forgiven #1)
Book
High school sweethearts Mia and Luke get a second chance at love in this brand-new contemporary...
Contemporary Romance

The Virgin Elizabeth: A Novel
Book
A book of passion, of sixteenth-century England, of greed and political ambition unto death....

Mystery Case Files: Key To Ravenhearst - A Mystery Hidden Object Game (Full)
Games and Entertainment
App
Unlock the complete adventure with a single purchase! No in-app purchases! The word is out that...

My Life, Our Times
Book
As former Prime Minister and our longest-serving Chancellor, Gordon Brown has been a guiding force...
biography politics

Tombland (The Shardlake series Book 7)
Book
Summer, 1549. Two years after the death of Henry VIII, England is sliding into chaos . . . The...

Separate: The Story of Plessy v. Ferguson, and America's Journey from Slavery to Segregation
Book
Plessy v. Ferguson, the Supreme Court case synonymous with “separate but equal,” created...

Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen
Book
Acclaimed author and historian Alison Weir continues her epic Six Tudor Queens series with this...

Death In Provence
Book
The first entry in a clever, lighthearted mystery series set in modern Provence—a delightful blend...
Fiction Contemporary Cultural France Cozy Mystery

The Demon Lord of California (Infinity 8 #1)
Book
Earth, 1900. Calico Winghorse has no choice but to flee to the plane of existence called Earth....
LGBTQ+ Urban Fantasy Paranormal

Lyndsey Gollogly (2893 KP) rated The Queen's Head (Nicholas Bracewell, #1) in Books
Sep 9, 2021
Book
The Queens Head ( Nicolas Bracewell book 1)
By Edward Marston
Once read a review will be written via Smashbomb and link posted in comments
1587, and Mary, Queen of Scots, dies by the executioner's axe, her head, shorn of its auburn wig, rolling across the platform. Will her death end the ceaseless plotting against Mary's red-haired cousin, Elizabeth?1588, the year of the Spanish Armada, is a time of more terror and triumph, not just for queen and court but for the whole of England. The turmoil is reflected in its theatres and under the galleries of inns like London's The Queen's Head where Lord Westfield's Men perform. The scene there on grows even more tumultuous when one of the actors is murdered by a mysterious stranger during a brawl.Nicholas Bracewell, the company's bookholder, a role far wider than mere producer, faces two immediate repercussions. The first is to secure a replacement acceptable to its temperamental star -- and chief shareholder -- Lawrence Firethorn. The second is to keep his promise to the dying Will Fowler and catch his killer.Soon further robberies, accidents, and misfortunes strike Lord Westfield's Men even as their stage successes swell. Bracewell begins to suspect a conspiracy, not a single murderous act, but where lies the proof? Then the players are rewarded with the ultimate accolade -- an appearance at court -- and the canny bookholder senses the end to the drama is at hand....
It was good not something I’d come back to reading again but good enough to take me to book 2. I love this era and found the descriptions one of the best parts of the book. I did have it sussed from just after the murder though.