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Historical Figures - Fiction, Arts & Entertainment - Fiction, Other Mystery Categories, Historical Fiction
The Counterfeit Crank by Edward Marston,Keith Miles β€” book cover

The Counterfeit Crank

by Edward Marston, Keith Miles
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Overview

Nicholas Bracewell, the book holder and stage manager for the popular London theater troupe Westfield's Men, has a few problems on his hands. Edmund Hoode, the troupe's talented playwright, has fallen ill and is unable to complete his next opus. But is his illness from natural causes or is something more sinister afoot? An absentee landlord seems to have coincided with a few unusual events at the inn the troupe calls home. A gambler has moved in upstairs and proceeds to take money off many of the actors, something the regular landlord would never have allowed to happen. The troupe's costumes are purloined from a locked storage cabinet and they are forced to perform with makeshift clothing.

When Nicholas meets a couple of down on their luck young people who are making their living as con artists on the streets of London, helping them is almost too much for poor Nick. But he's got a good heart and an inquisitive mind, and as usual he'll stop at nothing before he gets everything under control. After all, the show must go on in Edward Marston's delightful fan-favorite, Edgar-nominated series.

About the Author, Edward Marston,Keith Miles

Edward Marston is the author of thirteen previous mysteries featuring Nicholas Bracewell as well as the critically acclaimed Domesday series. A playwright with a lifelong interest in history, he lives in England.

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Editorials

Booklist

"A deliciously saucy Elizabethan romp guaranteed to delight both historical mystery buffs and fans of the enormously popular film Shakespeare in Love."

Publishers Weekly

Right from the start of British author Marston's clever historical, the 14th entry in his Nicholas Bracewell series (after 2003's The Vagabond Clown), troubles beset the Westfield Players. Bracewell's sleuthing skills are much needed after playwright Edmund Hoode collapses from "falling sickness," stage carpenter Nathan Curtis and tireman Hugh Wegges lose their purses to a gambler, and gatherer Lucas Peebles is robbed of all the ticket money. The hapless group then suffers the ultimate indignity when their costumes are stolen and they're forced to perform in borrowed outfits "visibly the wrong size, shape, and color." Amid all this distress, a tender romantic interlude between "counterfeit crank" Hywel Rees, an actor of a different sort, and his beloved Dorothea turns tragic when the two are imprisoned in Bridewell Palace, once a royal residence, now a house of ill repute. These intrigues move rapidly with scene changes and subplots reminiscent of an Elizabethan stage play, and lead to a breathtaking finale when Nicholas and company use their stock-in-trade disguises to unmask a fraudulent operation close to home. A handy dramatis personae helps us keep all the names straight in this complex but beguiling tale. (Aug. 11) FYI: Marston is the pseudonym of Keith Miles. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The book holder for the Westfield's Men theater troupe, Nicholas Bracewell attempts to save his actors from the travails of Elizabethan London. The string of woes begins with the unaccountable illness of the troupe's resident playwright. A noteworthy historical series. Marston lives in England. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2004
Publisher
New York : St. Martin's Minotaur, 2004.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312319496

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