Affiliates
| Works by
Dorothy Dunnett (Writer)
[August 25, 1923 – November 9, 2001] |
Profile created February 13, 2008
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King Hereafter (1976)
With the same meticulous scholarship and narrative
legerdemain she brought to her hugely popular Lymond Chronicles, our
foremost historical novelist travels further into the past. In King
Hereafter, Dorothy Dunnett's stage is the wild, half-pagan country of
eleventh-century Scotland. Her hero is an ungainly young earl with a
lowering brow and a taste for intrigue. He calls himself Thorfinn but his
Christian name is Macbeth.
Dunnett depicts Macbeth's transformation from an angry boy who refuses to
accept his meager share of the Orkney Islands to a suavely accomplished
warrior who seizes an empire with the help of a wife as shrewd and valiant
as himself. She creates characters who are at once wholly creatures of
another time yet always recognizable--and she does so with such realism
and immediacy that she once more elevates historical fiction into high
art.
The House of Niccolo
The time is the 15th century, when intrepid merchants
became the new knighthood of Europe. Among them, none is bolder or more
cunning than Nicholas vander Poele of Bruges, the good-natured dyer's
apprentice who schemes and swashbuckles his way to the helm of a
mercantile empire.
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Niccolo Rising (1986)
Book One of the series, finds us in Bruges, 1460.
Jousting is the genteel pastime, and successful merchants are, of
necessity, polyglot. Street smart, brilliant at figures, adept at the
subtleties of diplomacy and the well-timed untruth, Dunnett's hero rises
from wastrel to prodigy in a breathless adventure that wins him the hand
of the strongest woman in Bruges and the hatred of two powerful enemies.
From a riotous and potentially murderous carnival in Flanders, to an
avalanche in the Alps and a pitched battle on the outskirts of Naples,
Niccolò Rising combines history, adventure, and high romance in the
tradition stretching from Alexandre
Dumas to Mary Renault.
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The Spring of the Ram (1988)
In 1461, Nicholas is in Florence. Backed by none
other than Cosimo de' Medici, he will sail the Black Sea to Trebizond,
last outpost of Byzantium, and the last jewel missing from the crown of
the Ottoman Empire. But trouble lies ahead. Nicholas's stepdaughter--at
the tender age of thirteen--has eloped with his rival in trade: a
Machiavellian Genoese who races ahead of Nicholas, sowing disaster at
every port. And time is of the essence: Trebizond may fall to the Turks at
any moment. Crackling with wit, breathtakingly paced, The Spring of the
Ram is a pyrotechnic blend of scholarship and narrative shimmering with
the scents, sounds, colors, and combustible emotions of the 15th Century.
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Race of Scorpions (1989)
In 1462, Nicholas is a wealthy 21-year-old.
His beloved wife has died. His stepchildren have locked him out of the
family business. He and his private army are the target of multiple
conspiracies. And both contenders for the throne of Cyprus, the brilliant
Queen Carlotta and her charismatic, sexually ambivalent brother James, are
demanding his support. Walking a tightrope of intrigue, Dunnett's hero
juggles adversaries and allies, from the delectable courtesan Primaflora
to the Mameluke commander Tzani-Bey al Ablak, a man of undiluted evil.
Masterfully paced, alive with sensual delights, Race of Scorpions confirms
Dorothy Dunnett as the grande dame of the genre.
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Scales of Gold (1991)
The year 1464 finds Nicholas back in
Venice. Plagued by enemies bent on dissolving his assets and smearing his
character, he sets sail for Africa, legendary location of the Fountain of
Youth, home to a descendant of Sheba and Solomon, and the source of gold
in such abundance that men prefer to barter in shells. He will learn
firsthand the brutality and grandeur of the Dark Continent, from the
horror of the slave trade to the austere nobility of Islamic Timbuktu. He
will discover, too, the charms of the beautiful Gelis van Borselen--a
woman whose passion for Nicholas is rivaled only by her desire to punish
him for his role in her sister s death. Erotic and lush with detail,
Scales of Gold embraces the complexity of the Renaissance, where
mercantile adventure couples with more personal quests behind the silken
curtains of the Age of Discovery.
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The Unicorn Hunt (1993)
Scotland, 1468: a nation at the edge of
Europe, a civilization on the threshold of the Modern Age. Merchants,
musicians, politicians, and pageantry fill the court of King James III. In
its midst, Nicholas seeks to avenge his bride's claim that she carries the
bastard of his archenemy, Simon St. Pol. When she flees before Nicholas
can determine whether or not the rumored child is his own—or exists at
all—Nicholas gives chase. So begins the deadly game of cat and mouse that
will lead him from the infested cisterns of Cairo to the misted canals of
Venice at carnival. Breathlessly paced, sparkling with wit. The Unicorn
Hunt confirms Dorothy Dunnett as the genre's finest practitioner.
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To Lie with Lions (1995)
The year is 1471. Within the circus of
statecraft, where the lions of Burgundy, Cyprus, England, and Venice stalk
and snarl, Nicholas wields a valued whip. Having wrested his little son
Jordan from his estranged wife, Gelis, he embarks on the greatest business
scheme of his life-- beginning with a journey to Iceland. But while
Nicholas confronts merchant knights, polar bears, and the frozen volcanic
wastelands of the North, a greater challenge awaits: the vengeful Gelis,
whose secrets threaten to topple all Nicholas has achieved. Here is
Dorothy Dunnett at her best. Robustly paced, prodigiously detailed, To
Lie with Lions renders the quicksands of Renaissance politics as well
as the turnings of the human soul, from love to hate and back.
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Caprice and Rondo (1997)
Winter 1474 finds Nicholas exiled in the
frozen port of Danzig, Poland. His Machiavellian exploits in Scotland have
cost him friends and family--not to mention countless riches. As the ice
melts, temptations arise. Will he assist the Muslim Prince Uzum Hasan
against the Turks? Will he lose himself among the secret, scented gardens
of the Crimea in the arms of a close friend's bride? As Nicholas pursues
his future, his estranged wife, Gelis, seeks the truth about his past,
only to discover the secret identity of his latest comrade in arms--a
tantalizing ghost from the past poised to deal him the crowning death
blow.
Shimmering with detail, alive with intrigue, Caprice and Rondo is Dorothy
Dunnett's quicksilver evocation of a world where joy is fleeting, love is
unexpected, and truth the rarest commodity of all.
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Gemini (2000)
Scotland, 1477: Nicholas de Fleury, former
banker and merchant, has re-appeared in the land that, four years earlier,
he had brought very close to ruin in the course of an intense commercial
and personal war with secret enemies--and, indeed, with his clever wife
Gelis.
Now the opportunity for redemption is at hand, but Nicholas soon finds
himself pursuing his objectives amid a complex, corrosive power struggle
centering on the Scottish royal family but closely involving the powerful
merchants of Edinburgh, the gentry, the clergy, the English (ever seeking
an excuse to pounce on their neighbor to the north), the French, the
Burgundians. His presence soon draws Gelis and their son Jodi to Scotland,
as well as Nicholas's companions and subordinates in many a past
endeavor--Dr. Tobias and his wife Clémence, Mick Crackbene, John le
Grant, and Andro Wodman among them. Here, too, Nicholas meets again with
others who have had an influence, for good or evil, in his life: King
James III of Scotland and his rebellious siblings; the St. Pols: Jordan,
Simon, and young Henry; Mistress Bel of Cuthilgurdy and David de Salmeton;
Anselm Adorne and Kathi his niece. Caught up in, and sometimes molding,
the course of great events, Nicholas exhibits by turns the fierce silence
with which he masks his secrets, and the explosive, willful gaiety that
binds men, women, and children to him. And as the secrets of his birth and
heritage come to light, Nicholas has to decide whether he desires to
establish a future in Scotland for himself and his family, and a home for
his descendants.
Gemini brings to a dazzling conclusion Dorothy Dunnett's House
of Niccolò series (synopsized in this volume), in which this
peerless novelist has vividly re-created the dramatic, flamboyant world of
the early Renaissance in historical writing of scrupulous authenticity and
in the entrancing portrait of her visionary hero. Now, in a book infused
with wit and poetry, emotion and humor, action and mystery, she brings
Nicholas de Fleury at last to choose his heart's home, where he can
exercise all his skills as an advisor to kings and statesmen, as a
husband, a father, and a leader of men--and where, perhaps, we will
discern a connection between him and that other remarkable personality,
Francis Crawford, whose exploits Lady Dunnett recorded so memorably in
The Lymond Chronicles.
The Johnson Johnson Series
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Dolly and the Bird of Paradise
(1991)
Aka
Tropical Issue
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Dolly and the Singing Bird (1991)
Aka
Photogenic Soprano and
Rum Affair
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Dolly and the Cookie Bird (1993)
Aka
Murder in the Round and
Ibiza Surprise
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Dolly and the Doctor Bird (1993)
Aka
Match for a Murderer and
Operation Nassau
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Dolly and the Starry Bird (1993)
Aka
Murder in Focus and
Roman Nights
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Dolly and the Nanny Bird (1993)
Aka
Split Code
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Send a Fax to the Kasbah (1991)
Aka
Moroccan Traffic
The Lymond Chronicles
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Game of Kings (1976)
The first book in the legendary Lymond Chronicles,
Game of Kings takes place in 1547. Scotland has been humiliated by
an English invasion and is threatened by machinations elsewhere beyond its
borders, but it is still free. Paradoxically, her freedom may depend on a
man who stands accused of treason: Francis Crawford of Lymond.
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Queens' Play (1976)
Queen's Play follows Frances Crawford of
Lymond who has been abruptly called into the service of Mary Queen of
Scots. Though she is only a little girl, the Queen is already the object
of malicious intrigues that extend from her native country to the court of
France. It is to France that Lymond must travel, exercising his sword hand
and his agile wit while also undertaking the most unlikely of masquerades,
all to make sure that his charge's royal person stays intact.
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Disorderly Knights (1976)
The third volume in The Lymond Chronicles,
the highly renowned series of historical novels by Dorothy Dunnett,
Disorderly Knights takes place in 1551, when Francis Crawford of
Lymond is dispatched to embattled Malta, to assist the Knights of
Hospitallers in defending the island against the Turks. But shortly the
swordsman and scholar discovers that the greatest threat to the Knights
lies within their own ranks, where various factions vie secretly for
master.
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Pawn in Frankincense (1976)
Somewhere within the bejeweled labyrinth of the
Ottoman empire, a child is hidden. Now his father, Francis Crawford of
Lymond, soldier of fortune and the exiled heir of Scottish nobility, is
searching for him while ostensibly engaged on a mission to the Turkish
Sultan. At stake is a pawn in a cutthroat game whose gambits include
treason, enslavement, and murder.
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The Ringed Castle (1976)
The Ringed Castle leaps from Mary Tudor's
England to the barbaric Russia of Ivan the Terrible. Francis Crawford of
Lymond moves to Muscovy, where he becomes advisor and general to the
half-mad tsar. Yet even as Lymond tries to civilize a court that is still
frozen in the attitudes of the Middle Ages, forces in England conspire to
enlist this infinitely useful man in their own schemes.
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Checkmate (1976)
Checkmate takes place
in 1557, where Francis Crawford of Lymond is once again in France, leading
an army against England. But even as the Scots adventurer succeeds
brilliantly on the battlefield, his haunted past becomes a subject of
intense interest to forces on both sides.
The Dorothy Dunnett Companion
(1994) by Elspeth Morrison
Elspeth Morrison has re-created the author’s
exhaustive original research, documenting her myriad sources and literary
references. Foreign phrases are translated; poems and quotations presented
in full; historical figures and events fleshed out; subtle allusions–and
there are many–noted. From the origins of the Arabic drink qahveh to a
recipe for quince paste, from the medical uses of ants and alum, to Zacco,
Zenobia, and Zoroaster, this easy-to-use A-to-Z reference richly
illuminates the intricacies of the complex and far-flung Renaissance world
Dorothy Dunnett’s creations so colorfully inhabit.
The Dorothy Dunnett Companion, Volume II
(2002) by Elspeth Morrison
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Dorothy Dunnett Is Listed As A Favorite Of (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
Mary Doria Russell |