

Alice Arden, idealistic and wealthy beauty, burnt at the stake for killing her husband, the former mayor of Faversham in Kent. But was she really the one responsible for the most scandalous murder of the sixteenth century?
William Shakespeare, England’s greatest playwright, born thirteen years after Alice’s execution. Why does his first-ever play, written about this murder, not bear his name?
This is a story of two people – one reviled, one revered – whose fates become linked in a tale of corruption, collusion and conspiracy. Based on historical documents and recently published academic research, Arden unveils shocking new evidence about the murder of Thomas Arden and reveals, for the first time, a remarkable new theory about Shakespeare’s early years.
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I have written four novels in the last eight years under the penname GD Harper.
My last novel, The Maids of Biddenden, the imagined biography of real-life conjoined twins born in 12th-century Kent, was featured on BBC TV News and was the winner of the Next Generation Indie
Book Awards in the historical fiction category, shortlisted for the 2022 Selfie Award at the London Book Fair, and shortlisted or longlisted for five other awards.
It has over a thousand ratings on Amazon UK and Goodreads, with an average score of 4.3. Across the major Amazon markets, it reached number sixteen in overall paid-for e-book sales, number two in historical fiction and number one in medieval historical fiction.
My thoughts: I am a bit of a Shakespeare nerd, I’ve read most of his plays and poems over the years and studied him at uni. Somewhere I still have an essay on sexism in Hamlet. So I was really excited to read this book which brings the real life murder that inspired his first play and his life as an actor and jobbing playwright to life.
Alice Arden was burnt at the stake for the murder of her husband in Faversham, Kent, and it is this crime and the fact thaat victim and convicted shared the last name of his mother that inspire Will to write his first play, a play only about forty years after the fact, something that wasn’t done in those days for fear of prosecution and being banned by the Master of the Revels from performing it.
But Will persevered, he edited it and published it without adding his name so it could be performed and then his career as a writer began. After the Arden murder, he would delve into history and produce his incredible works, still performed and loved today, something he never could have imagined.
But this is also Alice’s story, that of a young woman essentially sold into a loveless marriage, who found escape in her affair with a tailor, who conspired with him and others who disliked her high handed husband, to kill him and try to make it look like a stranger had, although as he was wearing his slippers and found only metres from his home, badly done.
Alice suffered horribly before she was eventually burnt alive. The other conspirators were also executed, including her lover and the household servants. This fictional Alice is never entirely sold on the necessity of murdering her husband, unhappy as she was, but is talked into it.
Her unhappiness is reflected in that of Will’s wife Anne, raising three children in Stratford, relying on Will making enough money in the theatres to keep them fed and housed.
The author has clearly done an incredible amount of research and brings Tudor England vividly to life along with his characters. I was completely entertained and spotted lots of references and little snippets of the Shakespeares’ history that added to the realism (like his twins being named for his friend Hamnet and wife Judith) that I learnt in my own studies.
I didn’t know about the Arden murder, and it too is really fascinating. Women were chattel and many ended up in lonely marriages like Alice. Whatever her involvement in her husband’s death, she was clearly not willing to just put up with her situation and tried to change things, however misguided.
A thoroughly enjoyable read, I loved the insights into 16th century justice and the world of play writing.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.