At last, James, King of Scots, the second of that name, is approaching manhood, intending to fulfill his duty to the realm. Controlled by regents determined to hang onto power, he struggles to gain the strength to oust them. When the leader of the mighty Douglas clan moves to betray Scotland to the English, James must put aside his youth and defend the crown. Facing war with the Douglases, the threat is not only to his life and that of his young queen but to the very survival of the kingdom.
J. R. Tomlin is the author of nineteen historical novels.
She has close ties with Scotland since her father was a native Scot, and she spent substantial time in Edinburgh whilst growing up. Her historical novels are set for the most part in Scotland. Her love of that nation is traced from the stories of the Bruce and Sir James her grandmother read to her when she was small, to hillwalking through the Cairngorms where the granite hills have a gorgeous red glow under the setting sun. Later, her writing was influenced by the work of authors such as Alexander Dumas and Victor Hugo.
When JR isn't writing, she enjoys hiking, playing with her Westie, and killing monsters in computer games. In addition to spending time in Scotland, she has traveled in the US, Europe and the Pacific Rim. She now lives in Oregon.
James II, King of Scots comes of age in this book and struggles to take the reins of power into his own hands. William Douglas, 8th Earl of Douglas and his brothers would have it otherwise. The Douglas family have married into the Royal Stewarts over generations and so can claim a right to the throne themselves. The 8th Earl of Douglas's father, James Douglas, William, 1st Lord Crichton, and Alexander Livingston of Callendar had all plotted the the deaths of the 6th Earl of Douglas and his younger brother David. It is thought that William Douglas was complicit in their deaths as well. He would later marry the 6th Earl's sister controlling more land than James II and feeling he could do as he pleased. He went abroad on business and while he was abroad James II took and slighted two minor castles. William signed a bond with John MacDonald, Lord of the Isles, and Alexander Lindsay, Earl of Crawford and James II sent him an invitation to dinner under safe conduct. James II demanded that he break his bond with Crawford and MacDonald. William refused and disrespected his king. James II lost his temper, stabbing him with his eating knife while Sir Patrick Gray, Captain of the King's Guard hit him in the head with a pike. The war between James II and the remaining Douglas brothers is on with the Douglases seeking funding from the English king. James II will introduce a new element in warfare for taking castles : cannon