To those around her she was a loyal subject.
In her heart she was a traitor.
1399: Englandâs crown is under threat. King Richard II holds onto his power by an ever-weakening thread, with exiled Henry of Lancaster back to reclaim his place on the throne.
For Elizabeth Mortimer, there is only one rightful King â her eight-year-old nephew, Edmund. Only he can guarantee her fortunes, and protect her familyâs rule over the precious Northern lands bordering Scotland.
But many, including Elizabethâs husband, do not want another child-King. Elizabeth must hide her true ambitions in Court, and go against her husbandâs wishes to help build a rebel army.
To question her loyalty to the King places Elizabeth in the shadow of the axe.
To concede would curdle her Plantagenet blood.
This is one womanâs quest to turn history on its head.
âOâBrien is now approaching Philippa Gregory statusâ Readerâs Digest âOâBrien is a terrific storytellerâ Daily Telegraph âOâBrien cleverly intertwines the personal and politicalâ The TimesPraise for Queen of the North:
âOnce more Anne OâBrien takes her readers on an emotional rollercoaster ride...Elizabeth Mortimerâs story joins the growing list of female lives Anne has gloriously rescued from historyâs recycling skipâ Joanna Hickson
âEnthralling ... with masterful skill Anne O'Brien takes the reader on an action packed journey back to the tumultuous and uncertain days of the fifteenth century. A medieval masterpieceâ Nicola Tallis
âWith Anne OâBrienâs trademark attention to period detail, itâs a fascinating readâ Womanâs Weekly
âImaginative, rich in detail and immaculately researchedâ Lancashire Post
Sunday Times bestselling author Anne OâBrien was born in West Yorkshire. After gaining a BA Honours degree in History at Manchester University and a Masterâs in Education at Hull, she lived in East Yorkshire for many years as a teacher of history.
Today she has sold over 250,000 copies of her books in the UK and lives with her husband in an eighteenth-century timber-framed cottage in the depths of the Welsh Marches in Herefordshire. The area provides endless inspiration for her novels about the forgotten women of history.
Visit Anne online at www.anneobrien.co.uk
Find Anne on Facebook and follow her on Twitter @anne_obrien