A story of politics, philosophy, and gender-bending intrigue featuring Alexander “Sander” Cooke, a young man famed for playing female roles in Shakespeare’s plays in Elizabethan London, and his best friend Joan, restricted from intellectual circles because she’s a woman. William Morrow, Feb. 2025.
Jane (Parker) Boleyn, who has featured previously in the author’s The Boleyn Inheritance and others, gets the full-length treatment in Gregory’s next novel. Her return to the Tudor era explores Jane’s motivations for her notorious actions. This is the US cover, perhaps designed to attract dark romantasy fans? HarperCollins, Oct. 2025.
This is the first historical novel I’m aware of about Mark Smeaton, the court musician accused of committing adultery with Queen Anne Boleyn (a treasonous act) and executed along with others caught up in the plot against Anne. His personal story is little known. SparkPress, May 2025.
A trio of enterprising women band together to write poetry and plays secretly, and ask a certain rakish actor to pose as the author when their scheming attracts unwanted attention. This sounds like a fun spin on the “Shakespeare authorship” theme oft-expressed in historical fiction. Alcove Press, July 2025.
In this debut novel, Robert Smythson, the English architect famed for his design of Hardwick Hall, Wollaton Hall, and other Elizabethan manor houses, looks into a suspicious death discovered during the rebuilding of Longleat in Wiltshire. Glowing Log Books, Sept. 2024.
Another lesser-known Tudor personage claims the spotlight here: Anne, daughter of Henry VIII’s good friend Charles Brandon, whose story of marital turmoil and clandestine romance is intertwined with that of a modern heiress and a remote country house in both women’s lives. Boldwood, Jan. 2025.
Knowing Alison Weir’s familiarity with Tudor-era notables, “the Cardinal” here could be none other than Thomas Wolsey, Henry VIII’s right-hand man (until he notably fell from grace). She explores his surprising career and personal life, including his affections for his longtime mistress. Ballantine, May 2025.
Lady Margaret Clifford is a Tudor heir you may not have heard of; she was a granddaughter of Henry VIII’s younger sister, Mary. The novel details the political, religious, and romantic intrigue surrounding Margaret as the English throne passes to Lady Jane Grey and then Mary I. This is first in a three-book series about women from the period. Sapere, Dec. 2024.