The tragic story of the real-life Shylockwas highly acclaimed in all its reviews on publication'The dramatic life and the horrifying traitor's death at Tyburn of Elizabeth I's personal physician, Roderigo Lopez, is the pivot on which Dominic Green spins an elaborate narrative of Elizabethan court life, dramatic political intrigues and Spanish spying tied into rivalry between Lord Burghley and the Earl of Essex, and a possible plot to poison the Queen. It's wonderfully robust, double-dealing stuff, tricked out from original research and coloured by fascinating period detail' The Times
A poorly written account of an interesting life. In many places, the English suggests that it is written by a non-native speaker of the language, not by someone whose Wikipedia entry tells me read English Literature at Oxford. "Apocryphal" is not a synonym for "archetypal", nor is "grousing" for "carousing"; mutilating the phrase "wheeler-dealer" to "wheeler of deals" removes both impact and meaning. Examples such as these made me wonder whether the history was also at fault, though it was on the surface far more convincing (except for his suggestion for the derivation for "full monty" as a phrase used by English speaking players of the Spanish card game monte).
This book sounded like it was going to be really interesting, but it turned out to be very different from what I thought it would be like. There's a little bit of background on Lopez, and then the book launches into a continuous, full-scale distillation of the politics between Portugal, Spain and England at the time (with the Low Countries thrown for added thrills).
Did not finish - I think I was maybe about 1/3 of the way through.
If there WAS a plot to poison Elizabeth, I didn't have the time or energy to wade through the rest of the book to find out. The writing was a complete slog.
Other irritants - constant references between Lopez's life and Shakespeare's plays, particularly Merchant of Venice, followed by pages of extrapolation. Extremely repetitive regarding the plot of this play, other versions of the same story, and pre-Shakespeare iterations of the story. Seriously, I GET IT that there are similarities and I GET IT that Lopez was Jewish; I don't want/need to be beaten about the head regarding it.
Could not possibly recommend unless you live to dissect the minutiae of the politics of the time and would enjoy conspiracy-story-style comparisons between Merchant of Venice and other similar tales. Very disappointing.
Wat een warboel van spionage, contra spionage en contra contra spionage. Het geeft niet bepaald een mooi beeld van de entourage van koningin Elisabeth.
A very very clever, stylishly written and yet deeply researched view of Elizabethan faction politics and espionage, as full of double, treble and quadruple dealing as any spook could wish for!