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Paperback The Fugitive Queen Book

ISBN: 074345748X

ISBN13: 9780743457484

The Fugitive Queen

(Book #7 in the Ursula Blanchard Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

It is 1568, three years since Ursula Blanchard exchanged her work as a spy in the service of her half sister, Queen Elizabeth, for the relative calm of married life. But when Elizabeth summons her, loyal Ursula senses there is more to her seemingly benign request than meets the eye. She is to pluck Penelope Mason, her inappropriately flirtatious prot?g?, from court and find the disgraced girl a husband, and she is also to deliver a secret warning...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great blend of fact and fiction

This is the latest in an excellent series of mysteries set in England during the reign of the first Queen Elizabeth. The writer shares a comprehensive understanding of the uneasy political and religious dynamics of the time, as well as life at court and the (very different) life in every-day Elizabethan England.The plot is well designed and carried through and the characters are well-drawn and memorable. I enjoy the fact that the protagonist is a woman and the viewpoint is feminine rather than masculine. It's all too easy, when writing historical fiction, to gravitate to the masculine, with the hero mounting his steed and dashing off in all directions, with exciting chases and plenty of swashbuckling fights and battles. You'll find a little of that here, but mostly you'll find a woman just trying to do her best for her susceptible young relative and for her queen. It's just that she has an exciting time doing it.Blending historical fact with dramatic and readable fiction is no easy task but the writer accomplishes it beautifully in this book. You feel the sad magnetism of Mary, Queen of Scots and the dedication and frustration of Sir Francis Knollys, her host and/or jailer.I found this to be a really good read from a writer who really understands this period in history.

A Historical narrative which happens to have a mystery!

I have read and enjoyed some historical fiction in this period, particularly the Chronicles of Lymond by Dorothy Dunnett, but generally am skeptical of mysteries. So often mystery writers spend a lot of energy deliberately misleading the reader and the payoff ("Oh, it was a red herring") leads to frustration at time wasted.Not in this case. I picked up this book without realizing it was one in a series and enjoyed it so much I went back and read the first novel (and will be making my way through the rest). The way this book is written, it seems more like a historical novel whose main character is reluctantly involved in a mystery, than a book in which the mystery is the point.Ursula Blanchard is an engaging, strong, sympathetic woman, and her point of view is sensible and shrewd. All of the minor characters are fully drawn-- including poor man-crazy, plain Penelope who keeps getting into trouble through her romantic nature. I knew this book was going to be good when Penelope's embarassing crush on the music teacher was never explained away-- it really WAS a poor teenage crush (so often something like this would be used as a red herring in which the music teacher was involved in a plot too etc. etc.)Great sense of menace once Ursula gets to the countryside, but nobody is a cardboard villain.I read this after having completed a disappointing collection of mystery short stories called "Much Ado about Murder," so Buckley's winning me over is even more impressive as I was skeptical that merely setting something in a historical period could make the story interesting... and of course, it isn't the merely the period that's interesting.Buckley is a terrific storyteller and Ursual is a wonderful narrator. Really enjoyable in every respect!

A few low points, but...

....if you can overlook the modern language (did Elizabethans really use pounds and ounces as units of measurement?) and a rather weakly described ending (we really would have liked to see how enraged Elizabeth became over this plot, or how much the culprits had to suffer!), this is still a fine read!

One of the best Ursula Blanchard mysteries.

The Fugitive Queen has to be one of the best Ursula Blanchard mysteries. Like its predecessors, it is a real page turner that keeps you glued to the edge of your seat. I particularly like the fact that we get to see more of her young daughter, Meg, as well as a better glimpse of her new husband, Hugh Stannard. For that matter, it is refreshing that finally Ursula has found a man worthy of her. Her second husband, Mathew de la Roche, was an example of a man who never understood his wife and, as much as he may have loved her, he was totally inadequate to make her happy. I never understood how she stuck with him for so long.At any rate, the plot is very solid and the situations are much more realistic than usual. Ms. Buckley has done her research well. If you are someone who wishes to learn more about life in England in the late 16th Century, the Blanchard series are for you. I particularly like the way that the whole Mary Stuart conflict has been narrated, as it gives you a more human portrait of the people involved as opposed to that of the popular belief.All in all, it is a book that I recommend highly.

strong Elizabethan mystery

It's been three years since Ursula Blanchard married Hugh Stannard, but in spite of his being twenty years her senior, it has been a peaceful time for the baseborn sister of Queen Elizabeth I. When Hugh and Ursula are summoned to court to collect her wayward wad, the queen and sir Cecil have a job for the former spy to perform.Mary, Queen of Scotts, has escaped her Scottish prison and sought refuge in England. She is now half guest and half prisoner and the Scottish regent is seeking an inquiry into whether Mary is guilty of murdering her husband. The queen and her accuser want Ursula to find out the truth of the matter and offer Ursula's ward a dowry with an estate that is next door to where Mary is being held. After much trouble, they finally arrive at the Yorkshire estate of Tyesdale where Ursula becomes embroiled in a plot to free Mary when her supporters kidnap her ward.Although Ursula has been content in the three years away from court and playing spy for her half-sister, she feels her blood stir as she once again becomes involved in politics and intrigue. She is an independent clever woman in an age when females were supposed to be weak and submissive. Readers will admire her strengths and her love for her child but they will care for the woman who lives life on her own terms.Harriet Klausner
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