Doctor John Dee, the sleuth in The Bones of Avalon, was a mathematician, astrologer and researcher of the occult. During Mary Tudor’s reign he was arrested and charged with treason for casting horoscopes of Mary and her sister Elizabeth; predicting anything that implied a reigning sovereign's death was risky business. He exonerated himself, escaping execution, and Elizabeth thought well enough of his abilities to ask him to select an auspicious date for her coronation.
In 1650, three years into Elizabeth's reign, she is still a young and inexperienced queen, her throne not yet secure. Repeated shifts between Catholicism and Protestantism have divided the country, sowing resentment, secrecy and suspicion. Cheap printed flyers spread frightening occult predictions; some infuriate John Dee by invoking him as their author.
In this unsettled climate, the novel has Elizabeth's adviser William Cecil sending Dee and Elizabeth's favorite Robert Dudley on a mission to discover what became of the bones of King Arthur after their resting place, Glastonbury Abbey, was dissolved and its buildings partially dismantled in Henry VIII's reign. In Glastonbury, once the mystical Isle of Avalon, Dee discovers that the official Protestant religion is being challenged not only by secret Catholics but also by people still following practices and beliefs from pre-Christian times. Then the body of Dudley's trusted servant is found gruesomely mutilated within the Abbey's ruins. Their mission, already politically hazardous, turns into a murder investigation that may threaten not only their reputations but their lives.
The novel offers an interesting portrait of a John Dee who cares deeply about scientific rigor, deplores sensationalism, and yet longs for a genuine psychic experience. Another well drawn character is a woman whose work straddles the border between the ancient healing arts and the "modern." The story can be slow-moving at times, with extended passages detailing Dee's thought processes, but readers interested in the Renaissance approach to science and the occult will find The Bones of Avalon an authentic, insightful portrayal of the period. (2010; 440 pages, including Notes and Credits discussing sources and some of the history behind the story)