The double murder of England's boy king Edward V and his younger brother Richard, Duke of York in 1483 has become one of histories most fascinating mysteries. Did the boys' uncle, the much-maligned Richard III, do his nephews in, or was it some other shadowy character from the British courts?At the time of Richard III's ascension to the British throne and for some time thereafter, it was commonly believed that he was indeed the guiding hand behind the disappearance and presumed death of the two boys. Revisionist historians and proponents of Richard III have since cast doubt on Richard's responsibility for the murders, convinced that such accusations were merely propaganda perpetuated by the Tudors, who reigned in Richard III's wake. Weir's research, citing and verifying the validity of Thomas More's works against other veracious sources and putting as well to use modern resources, brings her to the conclusion that such pro-Richard revisionists are deluding themselves...