Was Queen Elizabeth a Man - The Bisley Boy Story
Bram Stoker, Sarah Skye
Rated: 3.00 of 5 stars
3.00
· 1 ratings · 119 pages · Published: 1910
In this book, you'll explore Bram Stoker's research into the "Bisley Boy," who may have replaced Elizabeth when she died at age 10.
Is that why Elizabeth never married? Does this explain how Elizabeth abruptly transformed from a "dull" student to an aggressive student fluent in three languages?
What boy could have looked and sounded so much like Elizabeth, he even fooled her father? And did he really deserve the throne?
Sarah Skye has rewritten Bram Stoker's original, nonfiction story and added historical details to present the Bisley Boy as Elizabeth's possible lookalike and impostor.
Ms. Skye shares her own views, plus others' opinions from the last time the Bisley Boy story shook up historians, and made people look twice at the Tudor dynasty.
This book also includes Bram Stoker's story, lightly edited for easier reading.
If you're interested in the truth behind the story that Queen Elizabeth I was a man, start with this book.