The Courts of Illusion

by Rosemary Hawley Jarman

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Once again, Jarman (Crown in Candlelight, The King's Grey Mare) overshadows nearly all her competition in the British-historical genre--with a rich, often operatic tale of the 1490s, when Henry Tudor was working hard to establish his dynasty after the death of Richard III on Bosworth Field. Her narrator is tall, tow-headed young Nicholas Archer, haunted by the grisly execution of his knighted ... Mais father (a Richard supporter), living with his imperious mother, hard-working brother, and show more beloved sister in near-poverty. And, in the three-act tragedy that follows, Nicholas will eventually become the most trusted follower of ""Richard IV,"" pretender to the throne. The first act is the most mesmerizing: virginal Nicholas develops an unrequited homoerotic passion for his London-wastrel chum Hugh Finch (stepson of the king's jester) while his mother and upright brother Edmund become involved in anti-Tudor conspiracies; but, when Hugh seduces Nicholas' innocent sister Josina, it's Edmund who dies in the ensuing fray--so the stricken Nicholas vows to atone by taking Edmund's place in the Plantagenet conspiracy. Off, then, in the second section, to the Continent--where Nicholas is part of the ragged army/court that follows mercurial young Richard, nephew of the dead Richard III: he follows the Pretender to Flanders when the French king betrays them; he falls in love there with weaver Krista; he hears the persistent rumors that ""Richard"" is really a fake, a commoner named Pieter Warbeck; he's mistaken for the Pretender at one point, captured by the Tudors, then luckily rescued before martyring himself. And finally, in the third section, though pessimistic (""No one wins against Tudor"") and loath to leave Krista, Nicholas follows the Pretender on his would-be invasion--getting support in Scotland from King James (a practical sort who condones atrocities) but finding no welcome as they attempt to bring the insurrection south (""A turdpot aimed at the prince hit my visored face""); the flighty Pretender, who takes on Richard II-like dignity through his defeats and humiliations, is indeed doomed. . . while Nicholas reaches for spiritual peace after a ghastly discovery about Krista. This melodramatic revelation, in fact, is the only hackneyed moment here. Everywhere else, Jarman invests her straightforward scenario (a far simpler design than the Crown in Candlelight maze) with ironic dialogue, Shakespearean dimensions, and distinctive period colors--from cockfighting and Bartholomew Fair to the looms of Flanders. And the result is a noble yet earthy journey through an unfamiliar decade of British-royal tension: the fiction of choice for readers who want more than frills and jousts from historical drama. show less

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1 review
7/10
Filled with many details that make the story ring true, this book follows the life of fictional Nicholas Archer, aide to Richard Plantagenet during his campaigning to reclaim the throne of England from Henry Tudor in the 1490s. Against this backdrop of spies, plots, battles and shifting alliances is the tale of a Nicholas, his family and foolishness, his struggles and service, his loves and losses.

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Author Information

Picture of author.
14+ Works 943 Members

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1983
People/Characters
Perkin Warbeck; Lady Catherine Gordon

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6060 .A7 .C6Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000

Statistics

Members
92
Popularity
347,981
Reviews
1
Rating
(3.80)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
5
ASINs
2