Review by Booklist Review
Mina takes the reader back in time to March 9, 1566, the night Mary Queen of Scots' private secretary, David Rizzio, was murdered in one of the most shocking events of a treacherous era. The novella's suspenseful narrative reveals all of the cruelty and outright brutality of the crime in brilliant detail. Rizzo was dragged from behind the heavily pregnant Mary and allegedly stabbed more than 50 times. Why? The author offers twenty-first century insight into the lies, lives, and loves that precipitated this attack aimed at the queen, which challenged the throne of Scotland. Royal history buffs will find this portrait of the bloody evolution of one of the world's longest lasting monarchies fascinating, and mystery fans will be interested in picking up new threads of a historical crime examined by Arthur Conan Doyle in his story "The Silver Mirror" (1908) and by Caleb Carr in his novel The Italian Secretary (2005).
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Bestseller Mina (The Less Dead) vividly recreates a gruesome episode from the Tudor era in this searing novella set mostly over the course of a single day, Mar. 9, 1566. Mary, Queen of Scots, is the target of a conspiracy. Her ambitious husband, Henry, Lord Darnley, joins a plot to have David Rizzio, Mary's personal secretary and close friend, murdered in front of the heavily pregnant queen in the hope the shock will cause her to miscarry, and thus strengthen Darnley's claim to the throne. The first chapter's title, "David Rizzio Plays Tennis with His Assassins," heightens the tension as readers come to dread Rizzio's inevitable fate. Mina interjects well-wrought characterizations into the events that follow the tennis game, which culminate in the invasion of Mary's chambers by 80 armed soldiers, who drag off the helpless Rizzio and stab him 56 times. The author's other judicious choice, to employ some anachronistic phrasing (Mary refers to Darnley as "a waste of space"), creates a sense of immediacy. This superior historical thriller reads like a real-life episode of Game of Thrones. Agent: Fiona Brownlee, Brownlee Donald Assoc. (U.K.). (Sept.)
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