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Christopher Marlowe in London
Mark Williams Eccles
Harvard University Press
A fortunate discovery in the Public Records Office has enabled Mark Williams Eccles to add several important and extremely interesting details to the little we already know about the years of Marlowe’s triumphs as the first great English dramatist. The documents concern a street fight in September 1589 between William Bradley and Christopher Marlowe, in which Marlowe’s friend, Thomas Watson, killed Bradley. Brilliant research has enabled Eccles to lay before the reader a considerable amount of information about Bradley and Watson which throws light upon life in London at the time, on Newgate, and on the English college at Douai. For such light every student of the Elizabethan period will be duly grateful.
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The Overreacher
A Study of Christopher Marlowe
Harry Levin
Harvard University Press

front cover of The Reckoning
The Reckoning
The Murder of Christopher Marlowe
Charles Nicholl
University of Chicago Press, 1995
In 1593 the brilliant but controversial young playwright Christopher Marlowe was stabbed to death in a Deptford lodging house. The circumstances were shady, the official account—a violent quarrel over the bill, or "recknynge"—has been long regarded as dubious.

Here, in a tour de force of scholarship and ingenuity, Charles Nicholl penetrates four centuries of obscurity to reveal not only a complex and unsettling story of entrapment and betrayal, chimerical plot and sordid felonies, but also a fascinating vision of the underside of the Elizabethan world.

"Provides the sheer enjoyment of fiction, and might just be true."—Michael Kenney, Boston Globe

"Mr. Nicholl's glittering reconstruction of Marlowe's murder is only one of the many fascinating aspects of this book. Indeed, The Reckoning is equally compelling for its masterly evocation of a vanished world, a world of Elizabethan scholars, poets, con men, alchemists and spies, a world of Machiavellian malice, intrigue and dissent."—Michiko Kakutani, New York Times

"The rich substance of the book is his detail, the thick texture of betrayal and evasion which was Marlowe's life."—Thomas Flanagan, Washington Post Book World

Winner of the Crime Writer's Gold Dagger Award for Nonfiction Thriller


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