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THE ASTRONOMER

Lawrence Goldstone

A Novel of Suspense

A vividly imagined novel set in sixteenth century France where a young astronomer endeavors to uncover the secret that threatens to overturn Catholicism and the reign of François I.
1534, Paris. A student at the Catholic College de Montaigue, serving as a courier for the Inquisition, is murdered by members of an extreme Lutheran sect for the packet of letters he is accyring. His friend and fellow classmate, Amautry de Faverges - the illegitimate son of the duke of Savoy and an expert in astronomy and natural science- is recruited as his replacement and promised a decree of legitimacy if he can uncover the secret that threatens to overtrun Catholicism and the reigh of Francois I. Working undercover, Amaury journeys south to the liberal court of the king's sister, Marguerite of Navarre, the alleged heart of the conspiracy. The deepter he probes, the more Amaury is forced to confront his own religious doubts; and when he discovers a copy of Copernicus' shocking manuscript showing the Sun at the center of the universe, he knows the path he must follow. Replete with characters and events from history from the iconoclastic Rabelais to the burning of heretics in Paris, to preacher John Calvin and Copernicus himself The Astronomer is a powerful novel of love and betrayal, and a thrilling portrait of what might well have happened at a hinge point in history, when science and ancient religious belief collided. Lawrence Goldstone is the author of more than a dozen books of both fiction and non-fiction, including The Astronomer, also publishing in November 2017 from Pegasus.Goldstone's articles, reviews, and opinion pieces have appeared in, among other publications, the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Miami Herald, and more.
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Published 2017-11-01 by Pegasus Books

Comments

Goldstone turns his attention to the problem of traditional thinking versus the scientific approach to the physical world. The author nicely balances the reality of torture and injustice in the Middle Ages with the beginnings of enlightened thinking and the history of a new ideology. A taut aura of impending violence, a darkness of spirit, and a likable young hero.

Clever, fast-moving, and richly depicted,The Astronomeris the kind of book that makes you forget about dinner?until you smell the chicken burning in the oven.

Goldstone keeps his 16th-century themes?murder, religious fanaticism, espionage and court intrigue?moving at a 21st-century pace.

Lawrence Goldstone has produced a thinking person's suspense novel, a moral thriller whose plot is propelled along by ideas as much as by action. The novel's hairpin turns lead us through the history of astronomy, the politics of religion, questions of loyalty and faith, and the grubby labyrinth that was sixteenth-century Paris.