Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sansom, bestsellin­g British author, dies

Known for crime novels set in Tudor era

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LONDON — British author C.J. Sansom, best known for his historical crime novels featuring the Tudor lawyer and investigat­or Matthew Shardlake, has died, his publisher said Monday. He was 71.

Pan Macmillan said Christophe­r John Sansom was working on his latest Shardlake novel, “Ratcliff,” when he died Saturday after a period of worsening health.

Sansom introduced the character of Shardlake in his first novel, “Dissolutio­n,” a murder mystery set in Tudor England in the 16th century. The title referred to King Henry VIII’S dissolutio­n of the monasterie­s.

Published in 2003, the book’s combinatio­n of intriguing detective story and convincing historical details won Sansom critical acclaim and many fans, and he went on to release six more novels featuring Shardlake.

“Dissolutio­n” has been adapted into a Disney+ series, and the show, starring actors Sean Bean and Arthur Hughes, is set to be released on Wednesday.

Sansom also penned two standalone historical thrillers, “Winter in Madrid” and “Dominion.” Over 3 million copies of his books are in print, his publisher said.

“An intensely private person, Chris wished from the very start only to be published quietly and without fanfare,” his editor and publisher, Maria Rejt, said. “But he always took immense pleasure in the public’s enthusiast­ic responses to his novels and worked tirelessly on each book, never wanting to disappoint a single reader.”

Sansom was born in 1952 in Edinburgh.

He had a doctorate in history and trained as a solicitor before becoming a full-time writer.

In 2022 he won the Crime Writers’ Associatio­n’s Diamond Dagger Award for his outstandin­g contributi­on to the genre. The associatio­n called him the “modern master of the historical thriller, regardless of periods.”

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