Rosemary Aitken

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from The Germanicus Mosaic)
Jump to: navigation, search

Rosemary Aitken (born 1942) is an English author, who has written a number of academic textbooks and historical novels under her own name, and a series of whodunnits set in Roman Britain under the pen name of Rosemary Rowe. Her writings are similar to that of Philip Boast, Gloria Cook and Winston Graham.

Biography

Rosemary Aitken was born in Cornwall but spent much of her early life in New Zealand. Her professional career was spent teaching English Language and she has written a number of textbooks on this subject. Her first historical novel, The Girl from Penvarris, was published in 1995, the first in a series set in a fictional Cornish village.[1]

Under the name Rosemary Rowe she has written a series of historical mysteries, set in and around the Roman town of Glevum, (modern-day Gloucester). The detective in the stories, named Libertus, is a pavement-maker, whose expertise in mosaic patterns parallels his skill in resolving puzzling crimes.

Bibliography

Cornish Sagas

  • The Girl from Penvarris (1995)
  • The Tinner's Daughter (1996)[2]
  • Cornish Harvest (1998)
  • Stormy Waters (2000)
  • The Silent Shore (2001)
  • The Granite Cliffs (2002)
  • "A Cornish Maid" (2010)

Libertus Roman mysteries

  • The Germanicus Mosaic (1999)[3]
  • A Pattern of Blood (2000)
  • Murder in the Forum (2001)
  • The Chariots of Calyx (2002)
  • The Legatus Mystery (2003)[4]
  • The Ghosts of Glevum (2004)[5]
  • Enemies of the Empire (2005)
  • A Roman Ransom (2006)
  • A Coin for the Ferryman (2007)[6]
  • Death at Pompeia's Wedding (2008)
  • Requiem for a Slave (2010)
  • The Vestal Vanishes (2011)
  • A Whispering of Spies (2012)
  • Dark Omens (2013)
  • The Fateful Day (2014)

Novels

  • Against the Tide (2004)
  • The Tregenza Girls (2006)
  • From Penvarris with Love (2008)
  • "Flowers for Miss Pengelly" (2012)

Text books

  • Make up Your Mind (1982)
  • Teaching Tenses (2002)
  • Writing a Novel: A Practical Guide (2003)

References

External links