Synopses & Reviews
Lucrecia was a 19-year-old Madrilena when, in 1587, her dreams began to be recorded and published by a disaffected group of clerics. Over the next three years, they transcribed 400 of Lucrecias dreams, which they considered to be messages from God. The dreams warned of the defeat of the Armada, the death of King Philip II, the fall of Spain, and a new beginning under a new king. As some of her prophecies came true, she fell afoul of the authorities and was arrested by the Holy Order. This book includes 35 of Lucrecias most captivating dreams. The inventiveness of these visions are astonishing, while the stories that they tell are compelling and of immense historical interest. Roger Osborne weaves a commentary around each dream, which helps us to understand Lucrecias visions and the extraordinary time and place she inhabited.
Review
Spellbinding, horrific, poetic, apocalyptic, heart-rending, prophetic, seditious, compelling, and utterly fascinating—the dreams of Lucrecia de Leon have lain in the archives of the Spanish Inquisition for more than 400 years. Now this book reproduces 35 of her most remarkable visions.
Synopsis
From the author of
The Deprat Affair, history with a difference, presenting the dreams of a woman who lived at the time of the Spanish Inquisition.
Spell-binding, poetic and apocalyptic, the dreams of Lucrecia de Léon lay in the archives of the Spanish Inquisition for more than 400 years. Lucrecia was a nineteen-year-old Madrilena in 1587 when her dreams began to be recorded by a disaffected group of clerics. Over the next three years they transcribed her dreams which they considered to be messages from God. The dreams warned of the defeat of the Armada, of the death of King Philip II, of the fall of Spain and of a new beginning under a new king. As some of her prophecies came true and as the Spanish court grew more discontented, she fell afoul of the authorities and was arrested by the Holy Order.
About the Author
Roger Osborne is the author of The Floating Egg and The Deprat Affair. He also wrote a radio play based on The Dreamer of the Calle de San Salvador.