Murder too Soon, A

A Tudor mystery

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Pub Date Sep 01 2017 | Archive Date Aug 31 2017

Description

Jack Blackjack is ordered to eliminate a spy in Princess Elizabeth’s household in this engaging Tudor mystery.

June, 1554. Former cutpurse and now professional assassin Jack Blackjack has deep misgivings about his latest assignment. He has been despatched to the Palace of Woodstock, where Queen Mary’s half-sister Princess Elizabeth is being kept under close guard. Jack’s employer has reason to believe that a spy has been installed within the princess’s household, and Jack has been ordered to kill her.

Jack has no choice but to agree. But he arrives at Woodstock to discover that a murder has already been committed.

As he sets out to prove his innocence by uncovering the real killer, Jack finds the palace to be a place steeped in misery and deceit; a hotbed of illicit love affairs, seething resentments, clashing egos and bitter jealousies. But who among Woodstock’s residents is hiding a deadly secret – and will Jack survive long enough to find out?
Jack Blackjack is ordered to eliminate a spy in Princess Elizabeth’s household in this engaging Tudor mystery.

June, 1554. Former cutpurse and now professional assassin Jack Blackjack has deep...

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Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781780290980
PRICE $34.99 (USD)
PAGES 224

Average rating from 13 members


Featured Reviews

Our recalcitrant near-do-well Jack Blackjack, is ordered by his patron to murder a Lady-in-Waiting to the Lady Elizabeth. A survivor of the rebellion against Queen Mary, Jack is only too happy to leave the confines, and dangers (in the guise of a very angry cuckolded husband) of London for the bucolic English countryside. Now Jack may be an assassin for hire, but he is also not a killer of women. How he is going to pull off his assignment is something of frustration to him.

Read the entire review at https://journalingonpaper.com/2017/08/07/book-review-a-murder-too-soon-a-tudor-mystery-by-michael-jecks/

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Jack is one of my favorite characters. No longer a common street thief, he is living well due to the fortune of his benefactor. Only now his benefactor is demanding payment in the form of killing a Lady who is believed to be a spy planted in Princess Elizabeth's court.

Jack balks at this assignment and tries his best to get out of it, but he must pay the piper.

When he arrives, he must be sharp and stay focused as he tries to figure out who killed who and why. At the same time, he's trying to keep himself from ending up a corpse.

This is such an entertaining character and series. I enjoy the Templar series as well but Jack is just a great character.

Give it a try and you will soon see why!

Netgalley/Severn House  Release Date is September 1, 2017

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Instructed to perform the distasteful task of assassinating a lady suspected of being a spy, Jack Blackjack is amazed when he stumbles over the said lady already dead. To keep suspicion off himself, Jack must be on his toes and untangle the multiple threads of deceit that surround him.

This being my first introduction to Jack Blackjack, I was immensely amused by him. I found him to be relatable in how he had second thoughts about his choices. He had doubts about his decision to work for his employer. As many things that went wrong with his life, he just keeps going.

As to the mystery, it had the twists and turns that I love. Jack, to be honest, seemed to stumble over what he needed to work things out in the end.

The plot is delightful. I would recommend this to historical readers who enjoy enjoy tales set before Elizabeth becomes queen.

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June 1554, and following the events of a failed rebellion, Jack Blackjack has found himself in the employ of one Thomas Parry as an assassin. There remains the slight problem that he has never actually killed anybody (and doesn’t particularly want to) but other than that, it’s an ideal occupation. Money, wine, women… and then he is sent to Woodstock.
Woodstock is where Queen Mary’s half-sister Elizabeth is staying, not that she has much choice in the matter. There are concerns that a spy has been installed in the Princess’s retinue and Jack has his instructions – kill the spy. Having little choice, he enters the household and promptly trips over the body of the woman that he was supposed to kill. As Jack struggles to find the real killer – and convince his employers that he did commit the crime – it seems that most of the members of the household had a reason to kill the spy. And now it seems that most of them want to kill Jack as well…
Right, let’s get “Twerp-gate” out of the way first. Michael Jecks, the author of this tome and the Knights’ Templar Mysteries or whatever they’re called this week, called me a twerp on Twitter recently. Insulting the reviewer is an interesting strategy from an author, isn’t it?
OK, maybe he had a bit of a point. He tweeted a recommendation for a great mystery novel review site, at which I got excited about a new resource and clicked on the very obvious link to… yes, my own website. And then related this event of twitter. So maybe he had a point…
Anyway, obviously the gloves are off for this one.
Um…
Maybe…
Um…
Bugger, can’t really find anything to moan about here. I could say something about another book set in the Tudor times, but as I mentioned last time – Rebellion’s Message – this is the time of Mary Tudor, a little-mined era for historical mystery fiction. I’m sure we’ll hit Elizabeth’s reign at some point in this hopefully long-running series, but not yet. And as I’m hooked already, I won’t care.
Michael does a clever job differentiating this from his other work. Writing in the first person, from Jack Blackjack’s point of view, he keeps the reader’s interest not just with Jack’s witty reprobate personality, but by only revealing information as Jack discovers it without forcing an information dump on the reader. One example, to explain what I’m trying to say, is this. Early on, Jack is accosted by a large individual. He doesn’t get his name, so refers to him as One-Eye, for reasons you can probably figure out. But once he eventually does find out his name, he still refers to him as One-Eye (occasionally correcting himself) as that’s what he’s got used to doing. That may sound like a small thing, but the narrative is full of that sort of thing.
The other little triumph, apart from the twisty plot and me failing to spot the murderer, is the character of Jack. It’s not easy to make a self-interested, somewhat amoral character a likeable lead, but the author carries it off with aplomb. And there’s a wonderful bit towards the end where I thought for a moment that Jack had gone a bit Poirot just to tidy things up, but by the end of the book, it all made perfect sense.
Released on Wednesday 31st May by Severn House, this is another enjoyable book from one of my favourite authors. Even after calling me a twerp, this is Highly Recommended.

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