Now available in a new edition, the second book in Robin Maxwell \'s acclaimed Elizabethan quartet: "Powerfully lascivious intersections of sexual and international politics [combine] with Maxwell\'s electrifying prose .
Robin lives with her husband of forty years, yogi Max Thomas, at High Desert Eden, a wildlife sanctuary in the Mojave Desert..
Signora Da Vinci and Jane: The Woman Who Loved Tarzan are tales of the remarkable women behind two of the world\'s most beloved wildmen, Maestro Leonardo and Lord Greystoke.
The Wild Irish -- an epic tale of Ireland\'s rebel queen, Grace O\'Malley--closed out her Elizabethan Quartet and is now in development for a television series.
Her bestselling first Novel The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn , won two YA awards and has been translated into fourteen languages.
About author(s): Robin Maxwell began writing novels about the historical figures she had been obsessing about since graduating from Tufts University with a degree in Occupational Therapy.
Religion, sex, and the sixteenth century\'s most fascinating personalities are woven into a rich tapestry of betrayal, the quest for power, and love.
The two narratives collide when Arthur learns who his true parents are.
Meanwhile, the lifelong love affair of Elizabeth and Leicester has only been strengthened by the presumed loss of their child.
A dreamer, a romantic, and a magnificent horseman, Arthur sets off to fight Philip II of Spain.
The Queen\'s Bastard artfully weaves two tales, the first told by Arthur Dudley himself, who, exchanged at birth by Elizabeth\'s intimates for a stillborn infant, grows up as a country gentleman, never knowing his true identity.
Set against the sweeping, meticulously rendered backdrop of court intrigues, international scandals, and England\'s battle against the Spanish Armada in 1588, Maxwell deftly juxtaposes Elizabeth and Leicester\'s tumultuous relationship with the memoirs of the adventurous son lost to them--yet ultimately discovered.
In this entertaining sequel to The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn , Robin Maxwell fashions a stunning fictional account of the child switched at birth by a lady-in-waiting who foresaw the deleterious political consequences of a royal bastard.
Historians have long whispered that "the Virgin Queen" Elizabeth\'s passionate, lifelong affair with Robin Dudley, Earl of Leicester, may have led to the birth of a son, Arthur Dudley. [to] make for enthralling historical fiction" ( Publishers Weekly, starred review). . .
Now available in a new edition, the second book in Robin Maxwell \'s acclaimed Elizabethan quartet: "Powerfully lascivious intersections of sexual and international politics [combine] with Maxwell\'s electrifying prose