Skip to Main Content

Lightborne

A Novel

Published by Pegasus Books
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

LIST PRICE $18.99

PRICE MAY VARY BY RETAILER

Digital products purchased on SimonandSchuster.com must be read on the Simon & Schuster Books app. Learn more.

Get 25% off with code NY2025, plus free shipping on orders of $40 or more. (Discount on physical product only, terms apply.)

Buy from Other Retailers

About The Book

A thrilling reimagining of the last days of one of the most famed Elizabethan playwrights—Christopher Marlowe—and of a love that flourishes within the margins.

Christopher Marlowe: playwright, poet, lover. In the plague-stricken streets of Elizabethan England, Kit flirts with danger, leaving a trail of enemies and old flames in his wake. His plays are a roaring success; he seems destined for greatness.

But in the spring of 1593, the queen's eyes are everywhere and the air is laced with paranoia. Marlowe receives an unwelcome visit from his one-time mentor, Richard Baines, a man who knows all of Marlowe’s secrets and is hell-bent on his destruction.

When Marlowe is arrested on charges of treason, heresy, and sodomy—all of which are punishable by death—he is released on bail with the help of Sir Thomas Walsingham. Kit presumes Walsingham to be his friend; in fact, the spymaster has hired an assassin to take care of Kit, fearing that his own sins may come to light.

Now, with the queen's spies and the vengeful Baines closing in on the playwright, Marlowe's last friend in the world is Ingram Frizer, a total stranger who is obsessed with Kit's plays, and who will, within ten days' time, first become Marlowe's lover—and then his killer. Richly atmospheric, emotionally devastating, and heartrendingly imagined, Lightborneis a masterful reimagining of the last days of one of England's most famous literary figures.

About The Author

Hesse Phillips (they) was raised in rural Pennsylvania but now lives in Spain. Much of their early life was spent in the theater, where they developed a love for Shakespeare and the other Elizabethan/Jacobean dramatists. They earned a BA in theater history at Marlboro College, Vermont, and later a PhD in drama from Tufts University in Boston. While writing their undergraduate thesis on Edward II, they also began working on a novel about Christopher Marlowe that would eventually become Lightborne. They are a proud graduate of Grub Street Boston's acclaimed Novel Incubator program.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Pegasus Books (October 22, 2024)
  • Length: 448 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781639367412

Browse Related Books

Raves and Reviews

"In Lightborne, which explores the mysterious last days of Elizabethan playwright Christopher Marlowe, Hesse Phillips plunges us into a dark world of intrigue and betrayal—but one also punctuated by glimmers of poetry, lust, and love. Phillips’ novel is a masterpiece of heart-stopping suspense—a truly amazing debut."

Nancy Crochiere, author of Graceland

"Lightborne is dark and propulsive, simmering with violence, desire and intrigue. Rigorously researched but as gripping as a thriller, it makes a sometimes familiar period feel fresh and alive. It’s a sensationally good read and a vital queering of the Elizabethan narrative––I adored it."

Kerry Andrew, author of Skin and We Are Together Because

"Life and death stakes are introduced from the very first line of Lightborne, an Elizabethan-era page-turner that vividly portrays the final weeks of Christopher Marlowe’s life. The considerable research that went into this novel is remarkable, but it’s the author’s singular ability to fully inhabit Marlowe and the treacherous company he kept that makes the book such a compelling read. Lightborne offers a vibrant, urgent, harrowing account of the playwright’s life and death, and marks the impressive debut of a gifted new writer."

Lisa Borders, author of The Fifty-First State and the forthcoming Last Night at the Disco

“Hesse Phillips’ dazzling Lightborne returns us to a world of more moral certainty but considerably more physical danger, telling the story of Christopher ‘Kit’ Marlowe, the Elizabethan dramatist and spy, with a thrillingly intense sense of period. As a gay man, Kit is especially vulnerable to blackmail, tangling with malevolent agents of the state while attempting to write his masterpieces. The novel is a hugely impressive, visceral and moving portrait of one of the era’s most captivating and mysterious characters.”

The Financial Times

“In lush, galloping, impeccable prose, Phillip’s Lightbornenot only immerses us in Marlowe’s world as zestfully as a summer bath, it has made of Marlowe—long-dead and godlike figure as he is—a character we instantly feel kinship with, whose passions and fears are at their most human and very like our own. Phillip’s Marlowe not only rescues the man from history’s prejudices, we feel propelled to throw ourselves inside his world and revisit his life and work again and again.”

Michelle Hoover, author of Bottomland

“Full of intrigue, intensely atmospheric, and exquisitely dark, Lightborne takes readers on the breathless lead-up to Kit Marlowe’s notoriously mysterious death, offering a richly drawn, superbly researched dive into the conspiratorial shadows of Tudor England, replete with sharp insights into its theatre scene, queer subcultures, and ruthless inquisitions.”

Aube Rey Lescure, author of River East, River West 

"Other works of fiction have been written about the turbulent life and still not fully explained death of the Elizabethan dramatist Christopher Marlowe. None has demonstrated the erudition and intensity of Hesse Phillips’s debut novel. Phillips’s Marlowe is a haunted, driven man, more involved in the dangerous world of espionage than the theatre. Told in vivid, punchy prose, LIGHTBORNE is a brilliantly original take on a familiar story."

The Sunday Times (UK), "Pick of the Month"

"Set against a backdrop of plague fires and palace intrigue, this stunning debut speculates on the last days of Elizabethan poet Christopher Marlowe. Phillips' curiosity about this enduring historical mystery is the readers' reward. With deft storytelling and exquisite prose, Phillips offers an absorbing and devastating tale of men living passionately in a perilous age."

Kelly J. Ford, author of The Hunt and Cottonmouths

"A thoroughly contemporary take. Phillips links not only Marlowe’s killing, but also the great conspiracy of his time, the Jesuit 'Babington Plot' against Elizabeth I, to betrayed homosexual love. A fast-paced narrative chain of theatrical scenes breathes new life into familiar images of the period."

The Irish Times

"Brings Tudor England––and a marvelously realized Christopher Marlowe––to brilliant life. This is historical fiction at its glittering and transgressive best."

Neil Hegarty, author of The Jewel

"Absolutely fantastic. A deeply impressive achievement, meticulously researched and fabulously rendered. Genuinely reminiscent of the likes Hilary Mantel or Ken Follett."

Niall Bourke, author of Line

Praise for Lightborne:

"A wonderfully vivid and edgy piece of storytelling, the kind of brilliant writing that rescues historical fiction from the museum.”

– Joseph O'Connor, author of My Father's House and Star of the Sea

"A deliciously complex, vivid portrait of a violent and fascinating period, with an addictively charismatic cast of characters. Heart-wrenching, bold and earthy, this book gripped me and wouldn't let me go."

Leon Craig, author of Parallel Hells

Resources and Downloads

High Resolution Images