From the author of Poison and The
Borgia Betrayal, comes a new historical thriller, featuring the same
intriguing and beautiful heroine: Borgia court poisoner, Francesca Giordano.
Mistress of death Francesca Giordano—court
poisoner to the House of Borgia—returns to confront an ancient atrocity that
threatens to extinguish the light of the Renaissance and plunge the world into
eternal darkness. As the enemies of Pope Alexander VI close in and the papal
court is forced to flee from Rome, Francesca joins forces with her lover, the
brilliant and ruthless Cesare Borgia to unravel a conspiracy that strikes at
the heart of Christendom. But when a shattering secret from her past imperils her
precarious hold on sanity, only Francesca’s own courage and resolve can draw
her back from the brink of madness to save all she values most.
☆☆☆½
The third installment of this series is almost as
good as both of its predecessors. I was stoked about the opportunity to learn
more about Francesca’s past and how it has molded her into the woman she has
become. I think that the exploration of her past has helped her to develop as a
character and it adds to her charm and personality from the previous two installments.
The revelation of what happened to her mother has opened up a whole new
mystery. The only problem that I had with this novel is the lack of contiguity
from the previous two novels – the main antagonist in the first two novels was
missing in the third and I also found myself missing some of the smaller
characters who were not present in this novel either. I also found that the
supporting characters (Vittorio, Lucrezia, Renaldo) that Ms. Poole has been magnificently
developing over the course of this series were either absent or thrown in as an
afterthought. Still, I find myself anxiously awaiting the next installment – it’s
fun (and slightly annoying … I’m not overly patient) to slowly piece together
Francesca’s puzzle one book at a time.