The Eloquence of Blood

A Charles du Luc Novel #2

by Judith Rock

Berkley Trade

Mystery: Historical, Mystery

September 6, 2011

ISBN-10: 0425242978

ISBN-13: 9780425242971

Available in: Trade Size

The Eloquence of Blood
by Judith Rock

“An exciting new discovery” (Library Journal) returns to seventeenth-century Paris with a new historical novel of intrigue.

Christmas in Paris, 1686. The spirit of the season is shattered when Martine Mynette is murdered while trying to prove that she is the adopted daughter of the last surviving Mynette heir and thus claim her inheritance—money that the family otherwise intended to go to the Jesuit school, Louis le Grand.

Now, with Jesuits being implicated in Martine’s death, rhetoric teacher Charles du Luc will not rest until he finds her murderer...



Judith Rock's Bio

“AN ARTIST IS ONE ON WHOM NOTHING IS WASTED...”

Years go, I came across these words, though I don't remember whose they are. But I know how true they are.

Before I was a novelist, I was a dancer and choreographer; actress and playwright; professor and police officer; lecturer and researcher. Each of those passions and adventures has deepened and expanded my writing.

The Rhetoric of Death (which will be released by Berkley/Penguin on Oct. 5, 2010) is a historical novel with a dark mystery at its heart. It grew out of my 17th century dance research in Paris and is set in the Paris Jesuit college in 1686. Besides taking you into the lavish dance and drama the Jesuits produced on their college stage, the novel also takes you into the treacherous world of religious and political intrigue in Louis the XIV’s France.

You can read up on the history behind the novel in Terpsichore at Louis le Grand (Institute of Jesuit Sources, 1996). I think you’ll be surprised at what real Jesuits were doing back then, especially with dance!