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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
Original language
English
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MURDER AT WHITEHALL

Amanda Carmack

The acclaimed author of Murder in the Queen’s Garden returns to Tudor England with amateur sleuth Kate Haywood embroiled in court intrigue and a devastating scandal.
1559. The Twelve Days of Christmas at Whitehall Palace will be celebrated as a grand affair. But there are those who wish to usher in the New Year by ending Queen Elizabeth’s reign....

Despite evenings of banquets and dancing, the European delegates attending Her Majesty’s holiday festivities are less interested in peace on earth than they are in fostering mistrust. Kate, the queen’s personal musician, hopes she can keep the royal guests entertained.

But then Queen Elizabeth receives a most unwanted gift—an anonymous letter that threatens to reveal untoward advances from her beloved Queen Catherine’s last husband, Thomas Seymour. Tasked with finding the extortionist, Kate has barely begun investigating when one of Spain’s visiting lords is found murdered. With two mysteries to unravel and an unsettling number of suspects to consider, Kate finds herself caught between an unscrupulous blackmailer and a cold-blooded killer....

Amanda Carmack is a pseudonym for a multipublished author. Her books have been nominated for many awards, including the RITA Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award, the Booksellers Best, the National Readers Choice Award, and the Holt Medallion. The Elizabethan Mysteries include Murder at Hatfield House, Murder at Westminster Abbey, and Murder in the Queen’s Garden. She lives in Oklahoma.
Available products
Book

Published 2015-12-01 by Obsidian Mysteries

Book

Published 2015-12-01 by Obsidian Mysteries

Comments

Amanda Carmack’s writing is stellar...Flowing descriptions, wonderful historic and fictional characters, and an intriguing mystery make for an exciting story.

Carmack infuses this Christmas cozy with rich historical detail and irresistible machinations. Readers will be drawn into this depiction of the Tudor court and root for its talented amateur sleuth.

[Carmack’s] details on the sights, sounds and smells of London as well as her descriptions of court attire and typical manner of interactions really serve to bring this period to vivid life.