From Publishers Weekly
This pseudonymous novel by a veteran writer of historical mysteries kicks off a series featuring Nicholas Segalla, an immortal investigator of real-life historical mysteries who's based loosely on the legendary Count of St. Germain. The focus here is on the assassination of dissolute, syphilitic Lord Darnley, consort of beautiful, courageous Mary, Queen of Scots. The novel opens in the present, with Segalla giving the author a manuscript detailing his investigation 430 years ago of Darnley's death. Forming the bulk of the novel, the manuscript relates how Segalla, then a Jesuit under Archbishop Beaton, Scottish envoy to Paris, was sent to Mary's court, arriving in time for the great explosion of February 10, 1567, which leveled the manor house at Kirk o' Field, Edinburgh. After the explosion, the bodies of Darnley and a servant were found in a nearby orchard, apparently strangled. Segalla's not especially convincing investigation exonerates the man generally considered the main suspect, the brutal, womanizing Lord Bothwell. While Dukthas's hero and her prose tend toward the melodramatic, the concept of an immortal sleuth investigating great historical mysteries has appeal-and could catch on with readers despite this novel's flaws.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Booklist
Despite television's incessant lament that O. J. Simpson is the most famous person ever accused of murder, history tells us otherwise. More than 400 years ago, Mary Stuart, queen of Scots, was accused of plotting to murder her husband, Lord Darnley, in a cabal with her alleged lover, Lord Bothwell. Darnley was found dead at Kirk O'Field, lying with his squire companion, neither with a bruise on his body, some 40 yards from the house in which they were staying and which had just been destroyed by an explosion. The manner of Lord Darnley's death, as well as who murdered him, has remained a puzzle ever since. Until the present day, that is, when a mysterious visitor, Nicholas Segalia, who knows a great deal about the events and actually may have been around at the time, hands over a script to our author--and so the exciting story begins. Readers will not be disappointed by the swift and lean narrative and the solutions to the historical puzzle Dukthas draws. History fans may debate it, but mystery fans will love it.
Eugene Sullivan
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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