My Lady Jane Now

The book’s most brilliant twist is its magic system. In this alternate 16th century, a portion of the population are —people who can shapeshift into animals. Guildford’s curse (or is it a blessing?) is that he turns into a horse. Every single day. This leads to one of the funniest and most charming fantasy premises imaginable: a young queen who is horrified to discover her new husband spends his days as a large, grumpy, carrot-stealing stallion named "Horse."

Don't call it a historical romance. Don't call it a fantasy farce. Call it a And trust us: you’ll never look at a horse the same way again. My Lady Jane

Forget everything you know about the Tudor dynasty. Actually, don’t just forget it—set it on fire, dance on the ashes, and then hand those ashes to a band of sarcastic minstrels to turn into a ballad. That is the only way to prepare for My Lady Jane , the wildly inventive, irreverent, and utterly addictive historical fantasy-comedy. The book’s most brilliant twist is its magic system

My Lady Jane says: "Absolutely not."

At its heart, the novel (by the trio of authors known as Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows, now also a hit Prime Video series) takes a tragic footnote from English history and gives it a glorious, triumphant rewrite. The real Lady Jane Grey was the "Nine Days' Queen"—a teenage pawn in a political power game who was swiftly deposed by Mary Tudor and executed. It’s a grim story. Every single day

In this version, Jane Grey is not a helpless victim. She’s a brilliant, bookish, and gloriously awkward young woman who would rather be translating Greek poetry than wearing a crown. Her mother is a social-climbing nightmare, her cousin King Edward is a hilariously melodramatic teenage ruler, and her new husband, Lord Guildford Dudley? Well, he has a secret.