(2/1/2016)
Sharratt bases her story on the premise that Aemilia Bassano Lanier, an actual Renaissance poet, could have been Shakespeare's collaborator and muse. Using this concept as a starting point, the novelist creates a fanciful depiction of Aemilia's life and connections to Shakespeare and other Renaissance figures of her day. Sharratt cleverly interweaves quotations and situations from Shakespeare's plays to form parallels to events in her narrative. Some of the connections, however, seem to be a bit of a stretch, even for a fictionalized account. Also, coincidence is used too often to bail out Aemilia from difficult straits. All in all, the novel still remains engrossing in that it does shed light on the social and literary restrictions placed upon even the most educated women of Shakespeare's day.