John Shakespeare is back, and I’m so happy! Five years after he decides that he wants a quiet life, and hangs up his boots as intelligencer for the crown, instead running a school for poor boys, and married to a catholic woman, he is called back to action. Firstly, by Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, in the hunt for a woman, who may or may not be Eleanor Dare, one of the members of a colony set up in the new world, who mysteriously vanished without any trace. There has been sightings in London, supposedly of Eleanor, and Essex wants John Shakespeare to get to the bottom of it. However, unbeknown to Essex, Robert Cecil also enlists Shakespeare, as a double agent. Cecil knows that Essex is plotting treasonous crimes, he just needs proof. So if Shakespeare can gain the trust of Robert Devereux, and his family, Cecil is certain that the plots will become apparent. As a subplot, we are introduced to an Irish man, Charlie McGunn, associate of Essex. The title of this book is actually taken in honour of McGunn, as the majority of the plots are all linked in with him, trying to extract his revenge on Sir Walter Raleigh, for an act of despicable violence committed by Raleigh and his men whilst privateering in and around Ireland.
The plots and sub plots of this novel are all woven together so seamlessly, that despite the fact they are quite complicated, it’s really easy to keep abreast of what’s going on, and how they’re all linked together. There are some really brutal acts of violence within the story, often resulting in the characters coming to grisly deaths, but it feels so authentic of the time. I really enjoyed reading this, and although it’s 2.05am, I’m about to make a start on book three in the series.