My name has only been whispered, heretofore…
England, 1591. Rose Rushe’s passion for life runs deep—she loves mead and music, meddles with astrology, and laughs at her mother’s warnings to guard her reputation. When Rose’s father dies and a noble accuses her and her dear friend Cecely of witchcraft, they flee to the household of respected alchemists in London. But as their bond deepens, their sanctuary begins to feel more like a cage. To escape, they turn to the occult, secretly casting charms and selling astrological advice in the hopes of building a life together. This thriving underground business leads Rose to fair young noble Henry and playwright Will Shakespeare, and so begins a brief, tempestuous, and powerful romance—one filled with secret longings and deep betrayals.
In this world of dazzling masques and decadent feasts, where the stars decide futures, Rose will write her own fate instead.
From the author of The Book of Gothel comes the lush, magical story behind Shakespeare's sonnets, as told by one of his most famous subjects—the incendiary and mysterious Dark Lady.
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I was given an ARC thanks to NetGalley and Redhook Books. The opinions espressed are my own.
Did not like. This is misrepresented as fantasy, but it is instead historical fiction that includes magical elements such as alchemy, astrology and witchcraft. This mis-characterization of genre would not have stopped me from reading it.
Instead, my issue was that I was bored and unwilling to keep slogging through to the end. Also, I found most of the characters unlikable and unsympathetic.