
Los Hermanos Plantagenet
A fugitive emerges from the fog-choked Thames, running toward an uncertain destiny on an isolated island in medieval England. It is 1194, and the Plantagenet crown tightens its grip on a restless kingdom. In a rustic cabin hidden among the marshlands, six men from the furthest reaches of English society gather in secret: a knight fallen from grace, a peasant wronged by his lord, a merchant crushed by royal taxes, and others whose names have been stripped away by tyranny. They have nothing in common but their suffering and their thirst for justice. Manuel Fernández y González, the prolific chronicler of Spain's past, turns his gaze toward England in this swashbuckling tale of resistance, weaving political intrigue with the raw camaraderie of outlaws who dare to challenge the crown. The novel pulses with the romantic spirit of 19th-century historical fiction, capturing both the grandeur and the grime of an era when speaking truth to power could mean losing everything.







