This series of blog posts on Bedtrick should probably have begun with an announcement for the book itself. This link will take you to the publisher’ website:    https://cuidono.com/Webber_Bedtrick.html

From 1599 until her death in 1603, Queen Elizabeth’s rule begins to lose its magic. She’s worked hard to be a Prince ‘in a feeble woman’s body,’ the almost mythic Gloriana, but her long reign is waning. Tensions outside her control contribute: intermittent bad weather and crops, possibilities of the recurrence of plague, threatening Irish rebels, worries that Spain might mount another attack. Perhaps the country needs a younger leader, some think. Robert Devereux, the Earl of Essex once the Queen’s dear Robbie, may fancy himself such a man.

As with all tense times, fear can outrun actual threats; dramatic change or disaster hovers. The Queen remains stalwart. But childless, she has not named a successor to the throne. A handful of Stuart cousins and noblemen with royal blood have their advocates.

This era is reflected in the plays William Shakespeare writes, from the light-hearted Much Ado About Nothing and As You Like It  to  Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida, and his two ‘problem comedies’, Measure for Measure and All’s Well that Ends Well.

Alexander Cooke, protagonist of Bedtrick and the actor who plays the leading female roles in these plays, views the issues of the day from a unique perspective. Sex, gender, and disguise on and offstage play through the story of Sander Cooke’s unique marriage of convenience.

Bedtrick is scheduled for release November 1, 2021. See publisher’s website for more information and advance orders:  https://cuidono.com/Webber_Bedtrick.html