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Traitor

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Traitor

By: Rory Clements
Narrated by: Gareth Armstrong
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About this listen

From Rory Clements, winner of the Ellis Peters Historical Fiction Award, comes Traitor, the fourth in his acclaimed John Shakespeare Elizabethan mystery series.

"Does for Elizabeth's reign what C. J. Sansom does for Henry VIII's" (Sunday Times).

The Elizabethan navy has a secret weapon: an optical instrument so powerful it gives England unassailable superiority at sea. Spain will stop at nothing to steal it and seize the two men who understand its secrets - William Ivory, the 'Queen's Eye', and the magician Dr Dee. With a second Armada threatened, intelligencer John Shakespeare is sent north to escort Dr Dee to safety. But he finds Dee's host, the Earl of Derby, dying in agony, apparently poisoned.

Who wants him dead and why? What lies behind the lynching of a recusant priest, and how is the mysterious but beautiful Lady Eliska involved?

While Shakespeare attempts to untangle a plot that points to treachery at the very highest reaches of government, he also faces serious accusations far closer to home. With so much at stake, must he choose between family and his duty to Queen and country?

©2011 Rory Clements (P)2012 John Murray
Historical Fiction Fiction Royalty Magic Users

Critic reviews

"Beautifully done . . . alive and tremendously engrossing" ( Daily Telegraph)
"A colourful history lesson . . . exciting narrative twists" ( Sunday Telegraph)
"Enjoyable, bloody and brutish" ( Guardian)
All stars
Most relevant
The Book

Traitor is the fourth in a series of five novels (so far) by Rory Clements, following Martyr, Revenger and Prince and preceding The Heretics. John Shakespeare is the fictional brother of William Shakespeare and is an intelligencer – an agent in the Tudor court of Elizabeth I. Each book sees Shakespeare solving a different crisis, and in this one it’s the theft of a unique telescope that could win England its struggle with the Spanish. Together with Boltfoot Cooper – the Watson to his Holmes – Shakespeare must find the telescope and the one man who can use it, battling the forces of politics, injustice and threats to his family along the way.



The Story

The story is energetic and engaging, and Clements conveys a real sense of the period – the injustice, the poverty and the religious intolerance – without making the story-telling turgid. The story weaves fictional characters and situations with those from history in a way that is seamless and convincing, and there’s a clear sense of authenticity to the many historical details that add colour to the prose. As the fourth in the series, Traitor develops a story arc that was started in the first book, Martyr, but enough back-story is peppered into the plot to make Traitor a novel that can stand on its own feet and make reading its predecessors unnecessary.



The Narration

Gareth Armstrong’s reading is clear and well-paced, and his delivery rich and emotional without being over-dramatic. He gives each character its own voice and personality and stays true to both throughout the story – it’s easy to think you’re listening to a drama with multiple actors. Armstrong does women’s voices very well too, and in giving lisps, breathlessness and even buck teeth to his characters, he brings them alive.

Intrigue and adventure in Elizabethan England

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The best story so far and what a narrator! Really enjoyed it. Would highly recommend!

Excellent!

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Really bought each character to life really brought each character to life dingdong bell dingdong bell

Amazing performance

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Absolutely loved it. I felt like I'd been sent back in time and was part of the story. 10/10

Most enjoyable

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Shakespeare is pulled back into the murky world of Elizabethan intrigue once again. A fantastic plot weaved with deft skill and guile by Rory Clements, excellently narrated too!

Absolutely breathtaking!

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