The Queene's Cure (Elizabeth I Mysteries)

366 pages

English language

Published Feb. 4, 2003 by Dell.

ISBN:
978-0-440-23595-8
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OCLC Number:
51562689

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(2 reviews)

Karen Harper's crowd-pleasing Elizabeth I Mystery series, hailed as "extraordinary" by the Los Angeles Times, continues with this marvelous, majestic novel. The Queene's Cure transports us into the shadowy world of sixteenth-century medicine, as an enlightened young queen seeks the cures that could heal a realm and transform a land.... In late summer of 1562, within a bedchamber at Whitehall Palace, Elizabeth Tudor prays for the recovery of the delirious, fever-racked friend who has served her for twenty-six of her twenty-nine years. Ten days later, with loyal, handsome Lord Robert Dudley by her side, the queen leads her retinue to London's Royal College of Physicians to enlist two learned doctors in the raging battle against disease and pestilence. She knows she has no trusted allies in Peter Pascal and John Caius, ardent Papist sympathizers with long-standing grievances against the Tudors. Yet even the stalwart queen is shaken when a frighteningly …

2 editions

Review of "The Queene's Cure (Elizabeth I Mysteries)" on 'GoodReads'

Karen Harper's The Queene's Cure, set in Queen Elizabeth I's court, is an engaging and entertaining read. The mystery begins when a mysterious effigy, made to look like the queen, shows up in her coach. If that weren't bad enough, it is made to look as if it is scarred by smallpox--Elizabeth's greatest fear. Meg Milligrew, the court's former apothecary, has been banished from the court for hiding her marriage, and much of the action revolves around her new life and her wish to be back in the queen's good graces. Harper's novel, though it jumps between the two narratives, is relatively easy to follow, and readers will be entranced until the end.

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