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Broach, Elise. Shakespeare's secret.


BROACH, Elise. Shakespeare's secret. Holtzbrinck, Square Fish. 258p. c2005. 978-0-312-37132-6. $5.99. J

To quote a review of the hardcover in KLIATT, May 2005: Hero Netherfield is entering the sixth grade in a new town and a new school. Her father has just recently taken a job at the Maxwell Library and the family has a new home; Hero just wishes she didn't have to start the whole process of learning to fit in again, especially with a name like Hero. Both sh\e and her 8th-grade sister Beatrice have been named for the women in Shakespeare's play Much Ado About Nothing Much Ado About Nothing is a comedy by William Shakespeare. First published in 1600, it was likely first performed in the winter of 1598-1599,[1] and it remains one of Shakespeare's most enduring plays on stage. . Hero meets the older woman who lives next door, Miriam Roth, who shares the story of a missing diamond and a missing daughter with Hero. Quite accidentally, Hero becomes friends with the police chief's son who also knows Mrs. Roth and about the missing diamond. He happens to be the coolest boy in her sister's grade. Together they look at clues--a quote from Dylan Thomas Noun 1. Dylan Thomas - Welsh poet (1914-1953)
Dylan Marlais Thomas, Thomas
, a picture of a necklace belonging to Anne Boleyn Anne Boleyn, queen of England: see Boleyn, Anne.
Anne Boleyn

(born 1507?—died May 19, 1536, London, Eng.) British royal consort. After spending part of her childhood in France, Anne lived at the court of Henry VIII, who soon fell in love with
, and the mystery of who wrote the Shakespearean plays. The clues lead them to the lights in Hero's home and a late-night search when no one is around. The diamond is found, and so is the lost daughter of their friend, Mrs. Roth. The mystery is well developed, with historical details about William Shakespeare, Edward de Vere De Vere may mean:
  • Aubrey de Vere II (d. c. 1112) and his descendants the de Vere family, 20 of whom who held the title of Earl of Oxford in succession, until 1703
  • Cecil Valentine De Vere, chess player
 and Queen Elizabeth Queen Elizabeth, or Elizabeth, may refer to: Living people
  • Elizabeth II, Queen regnant of the Commonwealth Realms
Deceased people
Bohemia
 I. Janis Flint-Ferguson, Assoc. Prof., English, Gordon College, Wenham, MA
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Author:Flint-Ferguson, Janis
Publication:Kliatt
Date:Jan 1, 2008
Words:246
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