Lamentation
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Lamentation is the eagerly anticipated Shardlake novel from the
number one bestselling author, C. J. Sansom. Summer, 1546. King
Henry VIII is slowly, painfully dying. His Protestant and Catholic
councillors are engaged in a final and decisive power struggle;
whoever wins will control the government of Henry's successor,
eight-year-old Prince Edward. As heretics are hunted across London,
and the radical Protestant Anne Askew is burned at the stake, the
Catholic party focus their attack on Henry's sixth wife, Matthew
Shardlake's old mentor, Queen Catherine Parr. Shardlake, still
haunted by events aboard the warship Mary Rose the year before, is
working on the Cotterstoke Will case, a savage dispute between
rival siblings. Then, unexpectedly, he is summoned to Whitehall
Palace and asked for help by his old patron, the now beleaguered
and desperate Queen. For Catherine Parr has a secret. She has
written a confessional book, Lamentation of a Sinner, so radically
Protestant that if it came to the King's attention it could bring
both her and her sympathizers crashing down. But, although the book
was kept secret and hidden inside a locked chest in the Queen's
private chamber, it has - inexplicably - vanished. Only one page
has been found, clutched in the hand of a murdered London printer.
Shardlake's investigations take him on a trail that begins among
the backstreet printshops of London but leads him and Jack Barak
into the dark and labyrinthine world of the politics of the royal
court; a world he had sworn never to enter again. Loyalty to the
Queen will drive him into a swirl of intrigue inside Whitehall
Palace, where Catholic enemies and Protestant friends can be
equally dangerous, and the political opportunists, who will follow
the wind wherever it blows, more dangerous than either. The theft
of Queen Catherine's book proves to be connected to the terrible
death of Anne Askew, while his involvement with the Cotterstoke
litigants threatens to bring Shardlake himself to the stake