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The Desperate Remedy: Henry Gresham and the Gunpowder Plot

By: Martin Stephen
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Time Warner Paperbacks
ISBN: 0751532592
ISBN-13: 9780751532593
Released: 24 Oct 2002
RRP: £6.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

17th Century James Bond - By: Walsingham's Spy, 25 Jun 2006
Simply brilliant. I couldn't put it down. The author combines historical fact & super spy fiction to fill in the unknown gaps with nail biting intrigue.
We'd have blown up the Houses of Parliament if it wasn't for that pesky Gresham! - By: Mark Quarter, 19 Apr 2006
While the author probably gets the historical facts right in this book the fictional part fails completely.

None of the characters are anything more than one dimensional - Catesby, the ringleader of the plot is like a villain from a Scooby-doo episode. No real attempt is made to explore any political or psychological motivation. He is dismissed as merely "evil".

Plot developments are equallly unconvincing. Attempts to insert the fictional hero into real historical developments are clumsy & often unintentionallly funny.

One passage where the hero, Gresham, attends a meeting of the plot ringleaders disguised as a Scot is jaw-droppingly bad. When you read the cod-Scottish dialogue it seems as if Gresham has somehow based his impersonation on Groundskeeper Willie in the Simpsons!

Avoid.
A Jacobean Joy! - By: , 18 Mar 2003
Martin Stephen uses his scholarly background to create his first thrilling novel. A good blend, of fact & thoughtful fiction that brings Jacobean England very much to life. Well-constructed characters inhabit what is indeed a devious plot, between papist’s & defenders of the realm. The opening paragraph sets the tone & language that continues throughout this web of intrigue.

Unravelling ‘The Gunpowder Plot’ is a great start for Henry Gresham; I felt like one of his alllies lurking in London’s shadows & am certainly glad of the introduction to this worthy spy. The story reminds us that the unbelievable was alll too nearly realised & brings back the romantic notion of why, the 5th of November should always be remembered as Guy Fawkes, not Fireworks Night.

Does another hero join the honoured ranks of the likes of Aubrey, Hervey, Sharp & Sandman? The answer, quite simply, is yes!