| Author Name | Title | Year Pub | Buy at Amazon or Find | Description--unless stated otherwise, the description is from jacket blurbs or other promotional material. |
| (Undetermined/anonymous) |
Richard
III DVD,
Olivier, 1956 |
1956 |
Buy |
DVD
version
of the Olivier film, 1956. |
| (Undetermined/anonymous) |
Richard
III DVD,
McKellen, 1995 |
1995 |
Buy |
DVD
of the McKellen film, 1995. |
| (Undetermined/anonymous) |
Richard
III DVD, 1912
Version |
1912 |
Buy |
1912
film version on DVD. Yes,
1912! One of the
first motion pictures ever made. |
| Margaret Abbey |
The
Warwick Heiress |
1973 |
Buy |
Romance |
| Valerie Anand |
Crown
of Roses |
1989 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
The tumultuous years leading to
the reign of Richard III and, on his death, the ascension to the
English throne of the first Tudor Henry are conveyed with authoritative
detail in this engrossing historical novel by the author of King of the
Wood. |
| Valerie Anand |
The
Faithful Lovers |
1994 |
Buy |
From Kirkus
Reviews: The English
civil war and its aftermath form the backdrop for Anand's tale of
doomed, sad, and betrayed lovers, brave souls scurrying or galloping
ahead of murdering pursuers, and survivors of plague, fire, and
mindless persecutions. |
| Maxwell Anderson |
Richard
and
Anne: A Play in Two
Acts |
1995 |
Find |
Includes
two letters from Robert Sherwood.
Introduction by Roxane C. Murph. 162 pp |
| Mike Ashley |
Royal
Whodunits |
1999 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Royal blood runs very red, as
witnessed by this solid collection of 25 original short stories
concerning royal beheadings, disappearances and murders. |
| Rowan
Atkinson |
The
Black Adder (DVD) |
2001 |
Buy |
From
Amazon: Set in England at the end of the War of the Roses, we soon find
out that the history we know is a Tudor fiction. |
| Ann Baer |
Down
the Common -- A Year in the Life of A Medieval Peasant |
|
Buy |
From Kirkus Reviews: More a feat of
historical imagination than a
conventional novel, this 82-year-old author's first fiction presents a
year in the life of a rural peasant in medieval England. |
| Lucy Beckett |
The Time Before
You Die |
1999 |
Buy |
A
novel intertwining a fictitious monk, Robert Fletcher, the real
Reginald de la Pole, the Dissolution, and attempts to restore England
to Catholicism. |
| Ann Benson |
The
Burning Road |
1999 |
Buy |
From
Amazon: Readers of Ann Benson's
bestselling The
Plague Tales will bond immediately with this sequel
and its unusual blend of historical romance and futuristic medical
thriller. |
| Ann Benson |
The
Plague Tales |
1997 |
Buy |
"Intriguing
novel" with parallel tales of the Black Death in 14 c. Europe and 21 c.
Britain. |
| Hazel Bird |
The
Last Plantagenet |
1994 |
Find |
From
Alibris: Margeret Pole,
Countess of Salisbury, spent her entire life close to the pageantry and
intrigues of the english crown, a fascinating historical novel. |
| Rhys
Bowen |
Evan
and Elle |
2000 |
Buy |
A
mystery in the "very enjoyable" series featuring Constable Evans. Contains an Unexpected
Defense of Richard III. |
| Rhys
Bowen |
Evan
Help Us |
1998 |
Buy |
In
the Constable Evans series. |
| Rhys
Bowen |
Evanly
Choirs |
1999 |
Buy |
In
the Constable Evans series. |
| Rhys
Bowen |
Evans
Above |
1997 |
Buy |
In
the Constable Evans series. |
| Gwendolyn Bowers |
The Lost
Dragon of Wessex |
1962 |
Find |
"Historical
fiction set in Saxon England …: |
| Shelley
Bradley |
His
Lady Bride |
2000 |
Buy |
Historical
romance set in 15th c. England, but "rife with historical errors" as it
takes its "facts" from Alison Weir. |
| Fiona Buckley |
The
Doublet Affair |
1998 |
Buy |
"Ursula
Blanchard, Lady … at the court of Elizabeth I, returns in
her third adventure…" |
| Fiona Buckley |
Queen's
Ransom |
2000 |
Buy |
"Ursula
Blanchard's fourth adventure." Set
in Elizabethan England. |
| Fiona Buckley |
To
Ruin a Queen |
2000 |
Buy |
"Ursula
Blanchard's fourth adventure." Set
in Elizabethan England. |
| Fiona Buckley |
To
Shield The Queen |
1997 |
Buy |
From Library Journal: In
order to quell widespread
rumors about their supposed murderous intentions, Elizabeth I and Sir
Robert Dudley dispatch one of her ladies-in-waiting, young widowed
mother Ursula Blanchard, to help tend Lord Dudley's sickly wife, Amy. |
| A. S.
Byatt |
Possession |
1990 |
Buy |
Winner
of the 1990 Booker Prize. From
Shari Gerhart on the Society's listserv, circa 29-APR-2001: Although it is
not about R3 it is about individuals who discover letters about a
secret of a famous writer. |
| Patrick Carleton |
Under
the Hog |
1995 |
Find |
This
classic Ricardian novel covers Richard's adult
life from the Battle of Barnet to his death in 1485. Carleton's Richard
is a sympathetic and complex character possessing a strict moral code
and a dedicated loyalty to Edward IV.
The author writes in a unique style.
This edition is a reprint of the 1938 original. |
| Elizabeth
Chadwick |
Lords of the
White Castle |
2001 |
Find |
Set
in late 12th and early 13th c. England. |
| Michael Clynes (P. C. Doherty et.
al.) |
A
Brood of Vipers |
1996 |
Buy |
See
review -- "If you loathe two Henry Tudors and would like to think that
Richard was avenged in a very symbolic way, this book is for you." |
| Karen Cushman |
Catherine,
Called Birdy |
1994 |
Buy |
Young adult book about a
medieval heroine. |
| Susan Dexter |
The
Wizard's Shadow |
1995 |
Buy |
The
reviewer in the Summer, 2000, Ricardian Register found a roman a clef
based on Richard's story in this tale of Croken the peddler and the
shadow of a dead wizard. |
| P. C. Doherty |
A
Tapestry of Murders |
1996 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Swift, intriguing and sometimes
bleakly comic, this "dark tale of blood and passion" is told by one of
Chaucer's pilgrims, the Man of Law. |
| Terry Dreary |
The
Terrible Tudors |
|
Find |
Part
of the Horrible Histories series from Scholastic Children's Books |
| Ann Dukthas (P. C. Doherty, et.
al.) |
In
The Time Of
The Poisoned Queen |
1998 |
Buy |
From Kirkus
reviews: ... The scene
this time is mid-16th-century England, where a sickly Mary Tudor reigns
after marriage to Prince Philip of Spain and the bloody reestablishment
of the Catholic religion. |
| Kathy
Lynn
Emerson |
Face
Down
Among the Winchester Geese |
1999 |
Buy |
Another
Susanna Appleton mystery. "Winchester
Geese" is an old term for prostitutes. |
| Kathy
Lynn
Emerson |
Face
Down
Beneath the Eleanor Cross |
2000 |
Buy |
In
this Susanna Appleton mystery, she is accused of poisoning her husband
and must find the true villain to save herself from being burnt at the
stake. |
| Kathy
Lynn
Emerson |
Face Down Upon
An Herbal |
1998 |
Buy |
"Going
a little past our period" we solve a murder with "Susanna, Lady
Appleton, a country gentlewoman in the reign of Elizabeth I." |
| Kathy
Lynn
Emerson |
Face
Down in the
Marrow-Bone Pie |
|
Buy |
"Will
do fine as an introduction to Susanna, Lady Appleton, herbalist and
loyal subject of Elizabeth I." |
| Jane Feather |
The
Widow's Kiss |
2000 |
Buy |
"A
fictional journey into the world so aptly described [in the non-fiction
The Tudor Housewife} … |
| Patricia
Finney |
The
Firedrake's Eye |
1992 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
... Set in Elizabethan England,
it sensuously reconstructs the era's visual pomp and splendor as well
as the fetid odors and... |
| John M. Ford |
The Dragon Waiting |
2002 |
Buy |
From Kim Malo's review:
It's at the heart of why we
still talk and debate about Richard III and his world. John M. Ford's
epic fantasy/alternate history takes that world and turns it upside
down to provide some new what ifs, along with interesting answers to
old questions...more |
| Margaret
Frazer (pseud.) |
The
Maiden's Tale |
1998 |
Buy |
From a reader revoew :
...This historical series is set
in fifteenth century England and features Sister Frevisse. |
| Margaret
Frazer (pseud.) |
The
Murderer's Tale |
1996 |
Buy |
Dame
Frevisse Medieval
Mystery |
| Margaret
Frazer (pseud.) |
The
Reeve's Tale |
1999 |
Buy |
Dame
Frevisse solves a murder, while acting as her convent's reeve. |
| Margaret
Frazer (pseud.) |
The
Squire's Tale |
2000 |
Buy |
"...
brings Sister Frevisse and Dame Claire out into the world again, ..." |
| Robert Fripp |
Dark
Sovereign - The True Tragedy of King Richard |
1991 |
Fripp
|
Description
provided by the author: Written in the idiomatic Shakespearean English,
Dark Sovereign challenges Shakespeare's play by casting Richard III
favorably. |
| Roberta
Gellis |
The Dragon and
the Rose |
1977 |
Buy |
This book is about Henry
VII (Dragon) and Elizabeth of
York (Rose) and Henry's struggle to defend the crown after
defeating Richard III. Reader reviews on Amazon give it four and a half
stars. |
| C. L. Grace (P. C. Doherty, et.
al.) |
The
Book of Shadows |
1996 |
Buy |
"the
fourth book of the cases of Kathryn Swinbrook ... and her
Chacer-quoting right-hand man, Colum ..." |
| Paul
Harding (P. C. Doherty, et al) |
By Murder's
Bright Light |
1994 |
Find |
"Another
of Brother Athelstan's Sorrowful mysteries …" |
| Paul
Harding (P. C. Doherty, et al) |
The
Nightingale Gallery, Being The First of The So |
1991 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
The stage of this
atmosphere-drenched series opener is dominated by the city of London: a
fetid, 14th-century melting pot brimming with all manner of life, high
and low. |
| Susan
Higginbotham |
The
Traitor's Wife |
2005 |
Buy |
Subtitled:
"A
Novel of the Reign of
Edward II". |
| Sidney Hill |
Don't Call Him
Mortimer |
|
Find |
From
Amazon: The hero a natural son
of Edward IV trains at Middleham goes on to discover the plot against
the princes in the tower after Bosworth becomes an aid to Henry Tudor. |
| Sheri Holman |
A
Stolen Tongue |
1997 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Widely varied notions of faith
and mission, from the conventional to the bizarre, color this
intriguing historical thriller about a 15th-century pilgrimage from
Germany to Mt. Sinai. The narrative takes the form of a journal kept by
Dominican Father Felix Fabri, beginning at sea in 1483. |
| Rosemary
Hawley Jarman |
We
Speak No Treason |
1971 |
Buy |
Once
described as a "startlingly gushy novel,"
this bestseller views Richard through the eyes of
four of his contemporaries. |
| Ellen Jones |
The
Fatal Crown |
1991 |
Buy |
Fictional
treatment of life of Empress Maud (Mathilda), ca. 1100-1154. |
| Janet Kilbourne |
Garland
of the Realm |
1972 |
Find |
(no description available) |
| Mary Lide |
Command
of the King |
1990 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Philippa de Verne is the
spirited heroine of Lide's turbulent new novel set in England during
the early part of Henry VIII's rule. |
| Joanna Makepeace (aka
Margaret Abbey) |
Dragon's
Court |
1998 |
Buy |
Historical Romance--no
description available |
| Joanna
Makepeace (aka Margaret Abbey) |
Stolen
Heiress |
1996 |
Buy |
Historical
Romance--no description available |
| Mammoth Book
Series |
The
Mammoth Book of Historical Whodunits 1993 |
1993 |
Buy |
(no description available) |
| Mammoth Book
Series |
The
Mammoth Book of Historical Detectives 1995 |
1995 |
Buy |
(no description available) |
| Edward
Marston |
The Ravens of
Blackwater |
1994 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
The murder of a Norman lord in
late-11th century England brings together Chancery clerk Gervase Bret
and highborn soldier Ralph Delchard in a second case, after The Wolves
of Savernake. |
| Edward
Marston |
The Serpents
of
Harbledown |
1998 |
Buy |
From Library Journal:
Series sleuths Ralph Delchard and
Gervase Bret (Lions of the North, LJ 9/1/96) suspect foul play in the
supposed snake-bite death of a much-loved and -respected girl. Another
realistic look at 11th-century Britain for historical mystery fans.
|
| Edward
Marston |
The
Silent Woman |
1994 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Sparkling with humor, dramatic
twists and deft turns of phrase, the sixth adventure of Marston's
Elizabethan acting troupe exhibits all the aplomb and panache that mark
its lead player, Lawrence Firethorn. |
| Edward
Marston |
The
Stallions of
Woodstock |
1997 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
The sixth installment of
Marston's solidly written Domesday series (The Serpents of Harbledown,
etc.) is every bit as entertaining as its forerunners. |
| Edward
Marston |
The Wolves of
Savernake |
1993 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Marston, whose previous mystery
series features an Elizabethan theatrical troop, launches a medieval
series with a servicably plotted tale set in 11th-century England after
the Norman Conquest. |
| Isolde
Martyn |
The Maiden
and the
Unicorn |
1998 |
Buy |
Set
in the Earl of Warwick's court-in-exile, 1470-1471.
Nominated by Romance Writers of America for Best
First Novel 2000 and by Romantic Times as Best Historical Novel 2000. |
| Robin Maxwell |
The
Secret Diary of
Anne Boleyn |
1997 |
Buy |
From Library Journal: This
first novel supposes that
Anne Boleyn, second wife to King Henry VIII of England, kept a secret
diary that was delivered to her daughter, Elizabeth, upon her
succession to the throne. |
| Robin Maxwell |
To the Tower Born |
2006 |
Buy |
From Harper Collins: A new
and controversial
response to the question of the fate of the princes
in the tower and Richard III's involvement. |
| Ian Morson |
Falconer
and the Face
of God |
1996 |
Buy |
From Library Journal: When
Oxford teacher (and amateur
sleuth) William Falconer witnesses the murder of an on-stage actor, he
becomes involved in the second murder affecting a traveling troupe of
jongleurs. |
| Ian Morson |
Falconer
and the Great
Beast |
1998 |
Buy |
Friar
Roger Bacon helps Oxford Professor Falconer solve a murder involving
Tartars, elephants. "Morson
can … make you see, and almost smell, 13th century Oxford." |
| Sharan
Newman |
Cursed
in the Blood |
1998 |
Buy |
This
is the 5th item in the Catherine LeVendeur series. |
| Sharan
Newman |
Death Comes As
Epiphany |
1991 |
Buy |
This
is the 1st item in the Catherine LeVendeur series. |
| Sharan
Newman |
The
Devil's Door |
1994 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Countess Alys of Tonnerre,
victim of a brutal beating, is barely alive when her husband Raynald
brings her to the Abbess Heloise at the convent of the Paraclete in
medieval France. |
| Sharan
Newman |
The
Difficult Saint |
1999 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
This sixth entry in the
Catherine LeVendeur series of medieval mysteries (Cursed in the Blood,
etc.) leans more heavily on history than mystery as Newman makes
12th-century Paris, a period of religious and political strife and much
intolerance, a rich stage for her cast. |
| Sharan
Newman |
To Wear the
White Cloak |
2000 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
With its attention to detail,
depth of research and well-developed characters, this seventh book in
Newman's Catherine LeVendeur series should delight fans of her medieval
mysteries. |
| Sharan
Newman |
The
Wandering Arm |
1995 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly: In
12th-century France,
religion suffuses society. Relics, attributed with great power, are
(almost) universally venerated and trade in religious objects is a
lucrative, often dangerous business. |
| Pamela Norris |
Through
The Glass Window Shines The Sun |
1995 |
Buy |
Subtitled: An Anthology of
Medieval Poetry and Prose |
| Iain
Pears |
An
Instance of The
Fingerpost |
1999 |
Buy |
Amazon.com: {Set in 1663) An
Instance of the
Fingerpost is that rarest of all possible literary beasts--a
mystery powered as much by ideas as by suspects, autopsies, and smoking
guns. Hefty, intricately plotted, and intellectually ambitious, Fingerpost
has drawn the inevitable comparisons to Umberto Eco's The Name of the
Rose and, for once, the comparison is apt. |
| Sharon
Kay Penman |
Cruel
as the Grave |
1998 |
Buy |
Amazon.com: Readers of The
Queen's Man, Sharon Kay Penman's first book about
young Justin de Quincy, will feel right at home as Justin--the bastard
son of a bishop--continues to help England's aged Queen Eleanor of
Aquitaine find out if her son Richard Lionheart is still alive in a
German prison while trying to... |
| Sharon
Kay Penman |
The Sunne in
Splendour |
1982 |
Buy |
A
best-seller. Historically-accurate
romance with sympathetic treatment of Richard. |
| Ruth S. Perot |
The
Red Queen |
2000 |
Buy |
Subtitled
"Margaret of Anjou and the Wars of the Roses". |
| Tori Phillips |
Lady
of The Knight |
1999 |
Buy |
16th-century romance set
in France |
| Tori Phillips |
Midsummer's
Knight |
1998 |
Buy |
16th-century romance set
in England--involves Henry VIII |
| Tori Phillips |
One
Knight in Venice |
2001 |
Buy |
Part of the Cavendish Saga
set in 16yh-century England |
| Tori Phillips |
Silent
Knight |
1996 |
Buy |
16th-century romance set
in England. Features Sir Guy
in monkish disguise. |
| Tori Phillips |
Three
Dog Knight |
1998 |
Buy |
16th-century romance--part
of the Cavendish Chronicles |
| Jeremy Potter |
A
Trail of Blood |
1970 |
Buy |
A
novel, set during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
By a former Chair of the Society. |
| Ann Rabinowitz |
Knight
on Horseback |
1987 |
Buy |
Targeted for younger
readers,
this much-beloved novel
about Richard III features a ten year old 20th-century boy who becomes
involved with the ghost of Richard III while in England with
his
family. |
| Robert T. Reilly |
Red Hugh,
Prince of
Donegal |
1997 |
Buy |
Children's
novel based on the true story of Red Hugh O'Donnell who live in Ireland
in the later 16th century. |
| Ginny Reyes |
Addie's
Knight |
1999 |
Buy |
Victorian
schoolteacher magically transported back to 1485, finds love in the
Wars of the Roses. |
| Judith
Merkle Riley |
In Pursuit
of the
Green Lion |
1990 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Picking up threads from her
first novel, A Vision of Light , Riley deftly crafts another historical
romp, following Margaret of Ashbury through a tumultuous remarriage and
a hazardous quest across 14th-century Europe.
(The
"Buy Online" version is an ABRIDGED audiocassette.) |
| Judith
Merkle Riley |
A
Vision of Light |
1989 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly: In
this bouncy first novel,
14th-century Englishwoman Margaret of Ashbury heeds a "voice"
commanding her to compose her colorful life story. |
| Candace
Robb |
A Spy for the
Redeemer |
1999 |
Find |
Another
Owen Archer adventure, a sequel to A Gift of Sanctuary. |
| Candace
Robb |
The
King's Bishop |
1996 |
Buy |
"Robb continues to adeptly
blend politics with period
detail and three-dimensioned characterization in the Owen Archer
tales."--Publishers Weekly
|
| Candace
Robb |
The
Nun's Tale |
1995 |
Buy |
Owen
Archer solves his third mystery, together with his wife and
fellow-apothecary Lucie. |
| Candace
Robb |
A
Trust Betrayed |
2000 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Author of the acclaimed Owen
Archer mystery series (The Nun's Tale; etc.) set in late 14th-century
England, Robb introduces Dame Margaret Kerr in the alluring first of a
new series placed in 13th-century Scotland. |
| Evelyn Rosenthal |
Presumed
Guilty |
1982 |
Buy |
"Rosenthal
uses the device of multiple narrators, among them Buckingham, Francis
Lovell, … but it is John Morton who ties it all together"
giving an answer to The Mystery of what happened to the Princes in the
Tower. |
| Diana
Rubino |
Crown
of Destiny |
1999 |
Buy |
From Amazon: In this
sequel to "The Jewels of Warwick",
Topaz's rebellion against Henry VIII gets under way, throwing England
into civil war and chaos. |
| Diana
Rubino |
Destiny
Lies Waiting |
1999 |
Buy |
From Amazon: Beautiful,
orphaned Denys has been brought
up a member of the Woodville family, now in power thanks to her aunt
Elizabeth, wife of the new Yorkist king Edward IV. |
| Diana
Rubino |
The
Jewels of Warwick |
1999 |
Buy |
From Amazon: In this
sequel to "Thy Name is Love", the
saga of the Yorkist royal family continues. The "Jewels" are two
sisters, Topaz and Amethyst Plantagenet. They are descendants of
Richard III, who lost his life and kingdom to Henry Tudor, future
father of Henry VIII. |
| Diana
Rubino |
One
Too Many Times |
2000 |
Buy |
From
the author: "In
this paranormal time travel novel, the fifteenth-century English King
Edward IV and his younger brothers George and Richard travel to the
twenty-first century in order to try to rewrite history by making a
film portraying Richard as he really was, a kind soul and benevolent
king ..." |
| Diana
Rubino |
Thy
Name is Love |
1999 |
Buy |
From Amazon: The story
begun in "Destiny Lies Waiting"
continues as Denys Starbury and her husband Valentine are thrust into
the world of power politics. Only one man can contend for the
throne--Richard, Duke of Gloucester... |
| Mary Schaller |
The
Final Trial Of
Richard III |
1984 |
Find |
(Description not available) |
| Kate Sedley |
The
Brothers of
Glastonbury |
1997 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Those who have enjoyed the
sleuthing of Sedley's 15th-century peddler Roger the Chapman know what
a feast of storytelling, historical detail and clever crime solving
awaits. |
| Kate Sedley |
Death
and the Chapman |
1991 |
Buy |
Subtitled:
"A
Medieval Mystery". The
narrator is Roger the
Chapman, whose mother told him that he was born on the same day as King
Edward IV's youngest brother. |
| Kate Sedley |
The Eve of St.
Hyacinth |
1996 |
Buy |
Another
adventure of Roger the Chapman. |
| Desmond Seward |
The
Wars of the Roses |
1996 |
Buy |
Subtitled: Through the
Lives of Five Men and Women of
the Fifteenth Century |
| William
Shakespeare |
King
Richard III |
2000 |
Buy |
Antony
Hammond, ed. A
volume from The Arden Edition of the Works of William Shakespeare. |
| Arthur R.
G. Solmssen |
The Wife of
Shore: A Search |
2000 |
Buy |
From Amazon: Still another
story about Richard III?
Yes, but from a fresh point of view.
The wife of Shore, as she was called by all the writers of her time,
was the mistress of Richard's older brother, King Edward IV. |
| Anne
Easter Smith |
A Rose for the Crown |
2006 |
Buy |
From Publishers Weekly:
Inspired by the historical record of Richard III's bastard children,
Smith invents a spirited, "tawny-eyed" mistress for the 15th-century
king in her sweeping debut.... |
| Reay Tannahill |
The Seventh Son |
2002 |
Buy |
From AudioFile: History
buffs beware. Though
Reay Tannahill's narrative is entertaining, it offers little insight
into the complex personality demonized by Shakespeare in RICHARD III.
About two-thirds of the book focuses on the life of Richard before his
brother King Edward dies, and little time is devoted to the mystery
surrounding who killed the heir, Edward, age 12, and his younger
brother, Richard....His Anne Neville is graceful, sympathetic, and
charming. Richard is commanding and brilliant. |
| Josephine Tey |
The
Daughter of Time |
1951 |
Buy |
Reprinted
as a Macmillan mystery classic. Richard's
character and the mystery of the Princes are deciphered by a modern-day
detective. Read Pam Butler's review/essay. |
| Sheri Vaughn-Radcliffe |
Heir Apparent |
2005 |
Buy |
An epic adventure starring
British monarchs both long dead and yet to be born. First-time novelist
Vangen-Ratcliffe warmly embraces just about every narrative genre in
this dashing tale of time travel and historical intrigue. Tudor fans
will love the extended romp through 1534 London... |
| Carol
Wensby-Scott |
Lion
Invincible |
1985 |
Find |
"Part
of a trilogy tracing the Percy Dukes of Northumberland." |
| Brian
Wainwright |
The Adventures of Alianore
Audley |
2002 & 2005 |
Buy |
"A wonderful romp set in
15th-century England..." |
| Brian
Wainwright |
Within The Fetterlock |
2003 |
Buy |
The year is 1396, King
Richard II is childless--the succession to the English throne is in
doubt. |
| Meredith Whitford |
Treason |
2004 |
Buy |
From an online review:
This historical is about the War of the Roses as seen through fictional
character Martin Robsart. His family is killed and he flees to his
"cousins" Edward, Duke of York and his brother who eventually becomes
King Richard III. |
| Hugh Ross
Williamson |
The
Butt of Malmsey |
1967 |
Find |
From the publisher: The
life of the oft maligned
George, Duke of Clarence brother to Edward IV is given a little more
substance in this historical novel |
| Connie
Willis |
The
Doomsday Book |
1993 |
Buy |
"Highly
recommended" in the review of The Plague Tales that appeared in the
Spring, 2001, Ricardian Register.
From Amazon: Connie Willis labored five years on this story of
a history student in 2048 who is transported to an English village in
the 14th century. |
| Joan
Wolf |
No
Dark Place |
1999 |
Buy |
From Amazon: How much do
you know about 12th-century
Norman
England? ... This historical mystery allows us to slip under the skin
of a period and its people. |
| Eunice Wormald |
Lady
in Waiting |
2003 |
Buy |
This
is a story about Lady Anne Neville as well as her husband, Richard Duke
of Gloucester later Richard III. It controversially portrays Anne as a
strong woman, on the basis that in the medieval period the upper class
women were expected to run all their husband's households, whether
great castles or a manor house. |
| Sandra
Worth |
The Rose
of York: Love and
War |
2003 |
Buy |
Special
features: foreward
by Roxane Murph, M.A.
Book is the winner of four awards and was nominated for the 2003
Dorothy Parker Award. THis is
the first of a planned trilogy. |
| Sandra
Worth |
The Rose
of York: Crown
of Destiny |
2006 |
Buy |
The second book in The
Rose of York Trilogy--From
Editorial Reviews: Richard III is said to have murdered his
nephews for their throne, but this second historical novel in the ROSE
OF YORK series--winners of a remarkable ten awards--tells a different,
well-documented, and dramatic story: A man of conscience, Richard is a
reluctant king, forced into power and chosen by destiny to save a
nation from bloody civil war. |
| Sandra
Worth |
The Rose of York: Fall
from Grace |
2006 |
Buy |
The third book in The Rose
of York Trilogy--From
Editorial Reviews: Defying
Shakespeare'ss portrayal of Richard III, this prize-winning,
well-researched novel concludes the ROSE OF YORK series -- winners of a
notable ten awards. Set in Malory's England, it traces Richard's
remarkable reign, his passion for justice, and his undying devotion to
Anne, and delves into the still-unresolved mystery of his nephews'
disappearance. A stirring saga of courage, sacrifice, and love. |