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A Clash of Spheres

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"A Clash of Spheres has it all: heart-thumping suspense, wry humor, political intrigue, a king in peril." —SHARON KAY PENMAN, New York Times bestselling author

It's late August, 1592.

Sir Robert Carey, cousin to Queen Elizabeth from the wrong side of Henry VIII's blanket, remains at his post on the Borders at Carlisle. He has at last been confirmed by his monarch as Deputy Warden, is still deeply in love with Lady Elizabeth Widdrington while despising her elderly, abusive husband (will the man never die?). And he remains estranged from his dour but lethal henchman, Henry Dodd, Land-Sergeant of Gilsland, who is currently serving as one of the sergeants of the Carlisle Castle guard. Dodd can't forgive Carey for taking the high road at the conclusion of the incident at Dick of Dryhope's tower, when Sir Robert called out the Carlisle garrison, but "honourably and skillfully avoided the bloody-pitched battle" that seemed inevitable. Dodd is old-school and would have preferred to exterminate as many under Wee Colin Elliott, and also Grahams, as he could. Not for him, but for peace to the Debatable Land.

Sir Robert Cecil, Privy Councillor to the Queen, warns of a new challenge: the King of Spain's "intentions in Scotland." Will Cecil be sending a pursuivant to the Borders to suss out, and possibly interrupt, whatever plots are in progress against England?

Now it's Autumn. We meet Marguerite, an over-sexed and unhappy wife. Father Crichton, a Jesuit, formerly of Spain. A man who says his name is Jonathan Hepburn but, curiously, thinks in Deutsch. Marguerite's elderly husband Sir David, a Groom of King James' VI's Bedchamber, a jealous man. Various disloyal Scottish Earls. Janet Dodd, wife to Henry, who learns an interesting thing from Mrs. Hogg, the midwife. Hughie Tyndale, a would-be-assassin. Mr. John Napier, a philosopher and mathematician with a revolutionary theory of how the solar system works. Mr. Simon Anricks, a toothdrawer (and philosopher, too) bearing a secret letter from England, who becomes delighted with Mr. Napier. Queen Anne (of Denmark), not yet a mother. And King James, not your usual monarch, plus his court, sycophants, and (former) lover Lord Spynie, who is still plotting revenge. So many spheres of influence or disruption in play.

Events come to a head at the King's court in Edinburgh where a great Disputation on the differences between the Ptolemaic and the Copernican systems, and a demonstration of the planets will be staged, a clash of spheres mirroring the same at the human level.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 20, 2017
      Chisholm’s intricately plotted eighth Sir Robert Carey mystery (after 2014’s Chorus of Innocents) finds the English courtier on the Scottish border in late August 1592, charged with bringing order and ending the bloody feuds between the Scottish Catholic lords and their Protestant counterparts. Various parties, many of them historical personages, vie for influence over Elizabeth I’s heir, James VI of Scotland. The spheres of the title refer not only to spheres of influence—political, religious, and personal—but also to the celestial spheres. A climactic chapter features a debate between supporters of the Earth-centered Ptolemaic system and advocates of the rival Copernican system. Chisholm does a good job illuminating the quandary felt by many when new scientific discoveries challenged the old religion. Loyal to his queen and his conscience, Carey proves an able statesman in an installment full of adventure and intrigue, although light on conventional sleuthing.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2017
      The court of Elizabeth I once more outpaces today's politicians for cunning, effrontery, and vengeful machinations.Handsome, brave, clever Sir Robert Carey is doubly related to the queen as the son of Lord Hudson, who was the by-blow of Henry VIII and Mary Boleyn. Carey has just been appointed Deputy Warden on the Scottish border country, home to his longtime henchman Henry Dodd, who's become his enemy since Carey avoided a battle in which Dodd's blood enemies, the Grahams, would have been slaughtered (A Chorus of Innocents, 2015). In addition, Carey spies for Sir Robert Cecil, the queen's privy councillor. Scotland is awash in plots to kill Elizabeth's heir apparent, King James of Scotland, who refuses to get rid of the Catholic lords plotting with Spain to invade England. Carey arrives in Edinburgh with Simon Anricks, a Jewish philosopher and dentist bearing a secret letter from England, who's set to debate another philosopher before the king on the weighty matter of how the solar system works. Dodd has accepted money to kill Carey. Just to make things more interesting, Lord Spynie, the king's former favorite, is also plotting to kill him along with the elderly husband of Carey's love, Lady Elizabeth Widdrington. The court is packed during the Christmas season with all manner of people, some of them eager to see James himself dispatched. Carey is lucky to escape death in an ambush disguised as a hunting accident. Dodd's wife, Janet, who's thoroughly disgusted with him, arrives at court with a warning about a possible plot to kill James. As the fates of Scotland and England hang in the balance, Carey finds so many suspects that it's hard to identify the potential killer or killers. As usual, Chisholm moves effortlessly from fascinating historical background to philosophical musings to violent action. Although this latest installment can be read as a stand-alone, untutored readers might want to start the series from the beginning.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2017

      In Chisholm's eighth series entry (after A Chorus of Innocents), tensions run high in 1592 Britain. Still pining for his (married) love, Sir Robert Carey has finally secured his place as deputy warden at the Borders at Carlisle, though not without incurring some enemies. There are rumblings of Spanish plans for action in Scotland, and as the Elizabethan political machine grinds into high gear, with various royal members caught in the wheels, Sir Robert must stay out of the way.

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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