cover image The Tower

The Tower

Flora Carr. Doubleday, $28 (272) ISBN 978-0-385-55018-5

Carr’s lush debut chronicles the imprisonment of Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–1587), following a coup by rebel lords. Recently married to her third husband and several months pregnant after he raped her, Mary is rowed from Edinburgh to Lockleven in 1567 to be held in a castle belonging to her father’s mistress. At her side are two chambermaids: Jane, a native of Scotland, and Cuckoo, who, like Mary, is originally from France. The two women are devoted to their queen and attempt to lighten her spirits through the first difficult months of her imprisonment, including her miscarriage, forced abdication, and severe illness. Tension mounts with the arrival of Lady Seton, Mary’s closest friend, as the three women vie for the queen’s devotion. Further drama ensues after Cuckoo has sex with a lute player and the women smuggle him out of their chamber by dressing him in women’s clothes, an act of subterfuge that inspires Mary’s climactic escape. Adding to the gripping plot is Carr’s successful portrayal of the women’s shared determination—driven by “memories as though they are prayers”—to recapture the kingdom. It amounts to a rousing and lyrical epic. Agent: Rebecca Wearmouth, Peters Fraser & Dunlop. (Mar.)