Part One of this original work of
fiction relates how two young Elizabethan scholars, Kate Harrison, M.A., Cambridge and Mark
Holdaway, M.A., Oxford, learn about the Marlowe-Shakespeare creation
and begin an eventful and increasingly dangerous search for the lost play in
contemporary London.
Part Two visualizes Shakespeare's developmental
years in 16th-century Stratford and his considerable travels during young
adulthood. The narrative concludes with Will’s initial adventures in London
where he wrote, acted, established his presence and then partnered on a new
play with Christopher Marlowe in the year before Marlowe's murder.
Until now, little is known about William
Shakespeare’s early adulthood. The absence of information on his boyhood is
equally sparse. This novel reveals those lost years. It describes the
preternaturally gifted person he was and details the myriad influences that
stimulated him into becoming an unmatched literary genius.
Similarly, Christopher Marlowe’s nurturing years in Canterbury are largely
a mystery. Like Shakespeare, he came from modest beginnings and attended
grammar school. Unlike Shakespeare, he enjoyed the additional privileges of
education in an elite secondary school before going up to Cambridge University
where he earned two degrees. The advanced scholarship opportunities make
Marlowe’s formative years and his later poetic and dramatic achievements less
of a conundrum.
When they first met, Marlowe was the
more innovative writer of the two. Seeing Marlowe’s production of Tamburlaine in blank verse irrevocably
changed the playwriting style of many period writers, including Shakespeare. Marlowe
also positively influenced the texts of several inceptive Shakespeare plays.
The friendship deepened to the point that they co-wrote a play and
brought it to near fruition. This novel discloses the subject and scope of
their masterpiece. Like many Elizabethan works, the Marlowe-Shakespeare play
was tragically lost and never performed.
Then, over four-hundred years later, in
Part Three of the book, the search for the lost play by Kate Harrison and Mark Holdaway
intensified, became competitive, then turbulent and finally deadly. ‘And
thereby hangs a tale.’
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