Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Rebellion's Message

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Introducing Elizabethan cutpurse and adventurer Jack Blackjack in the first of a brand-new historical mystery series

January, 1554. Light-fingered Jack Blackjack knows he's not going to have a good day when he wakes with a sore head next to a dead body in a tavern's yard. That would be bad enough – but when he discovers what's in the dead man's purse, the one he'd stolen, his day is set to get much worse. The purse explains why the mysterious man with the broad-brimmed hat wants to catch him. But so does the Lord Chancellor, as does the enigmatic Henry. In fact, almost everyone seems to be after Jack Blackjack.

If it weren't for the rebel army marching on London determined to remove Queen Mary from her throne and install Lady Jane Grey in her place, Jack could leave the city – but with the bridge blocked and every gate manned, there's no escape.

Instead he must try to work out who killed the man in the yard, and why. But it won't be easy as the rebel army comes ever closer and the death toll mounts ...
  • Creators

  • Series

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 27, 2016
      The year may be 1554, but a distinctly Dickensian atmosphere rules in this energetic series launch from Jecks (Templar’s Acre). London’s vast underworld teems with pickpockets, gamblers, prostitutes, and pimps. Real-life Tudor figures, such as Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, make occasional appearances. Jack Blackjack, Jecks’s winning if disreputable lead, is drawn to London because he doesn’t want to make leather jacks and buckets in Whitstable like his father or go into the army and end up “lying with my belly slashed open on a field of gore.” Jack takes to a life of crime, but he’s in over his head after a pickpocket scheme gone bad makes him the chief suspect in a tavern murder, and it’s revealed that the dead man was carrying a message critical to the conspirators in the Wyatt Rebellion, which opposed Queen Mary’s marriage to Philip of Spain. A master of caustic tone and well-observed detail, Jecks keeps the suspense at a steady boil as his well-rounded characters fight for a corner in tumultuous London with humor and even humanity.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2016
      A pickpocket's latest haul comes with a dangerous curse.Jack Blackjack lives in a hovel with fellow thieves Wat, Gil, and Ham; their fence, Bill Tanner; and his mistress, the delectable Moll. Jack steals a purse in a tavern and escapes through the door to the yard only to wake up next to a dead man. Back with his friends, he opens the purse, which holds a great deal of money and, as Jack secretly discovers, a hidden pocket containing a paper with a coded message. Since most people think Jack murdered the unidentified man for his purse, he must be careful to avoid the law while he tries to translate the cypher and find the real killer. Queen Mary's plan to marry a Spaniard does not sit well with the populace, and London is about to be attacked by a rebel army led by Wyatt, who wants to return Lady Jane Grey to the throne. A codebreaker helps Jack decipher the note, an order directed to Wyatt from some powerful personage. Meantime, Gil is beaten to death, probably because he was wearing the purse Jack stole, which has become the target of several mysterious groups. Each time the hapless Jack thinks he's made a discovery leading to the murderer, he realizes he's wrong and starts off on a new path. Despite his horror of killing, he ends up having to fight the rebels. Now he's threatened with a painful death by the Lord High Chancellor and constantly harried by both friends and enemies of the queen. Jecks inaugurates his new series by moving from medieval times (The Deadliest Sin, 2014, etc.) to the turbulent Tudor period. His unlikely detective is neither brave nor wise nor very bright, but he's often quite funny as he doggedly tracks down an unexpected killer.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading