I am delighted to share with you a guest article written by best-selling author and historian Alison Weir. It is an honour to publish Alison’s article on my site, as she is one of my favourite historians and works tirelessly to bring history to life.
Alison’s new novel, A Dangerous Inheritance, was recently published in the UK. Here is the synopsis:
The year is 1562. Lady Catherine Grey, cousin of Elizabeth I, has just been arrested along with her husband Edward. Their crime is to have secretly married and produced a child who might threaten the Queen’s title. Alone in her chamber at the Tower of London, Catherine hears ghostly voices, echoes, she thinks, of a crime committed in the same room where she is imprisoned. The story flashes back to 1483 and another Catherine – Kate Plantaganet, bastard daughter of Richard III. She has heard terrible rumours of the death of the young deposed Edward V and his brother (The Princes In The Tower) but loyalty to her father prevents her believing them. After his death at Bosworth, she is viewed with suspicion by Henry VII’s court, even more so when she becomes pregnant. Catherine, too, is pregnant, a friendly warder having sneaked Edward into her room. She finds documents relating to Kate’s life and gets swept up both in Kate’s story and the mystery of the Princes, which she realises Kate never solved. Kate dies in childbirth and it is left to Catherine to discover the truth about the Princes.
One of the characters in the story is Lady Jane Grey, Catherine’s older sister and this is the subject of today’s guest article. Thank you Alison and happy reading!
This sounds like it will be an enthralling read.
A nice change for it to be about Catherine Grey, instead of Jane, with the additions of other interesting historical figures, another book to put on the to buy list…Great 🙂
It’s a very long list, isn’t it Dawn? 🙂
You’re not kidding Natalie, lol….this period in history has certainly captured the authors of late.