It is 1502 and Arthur Tudor has just married the Spanish infanta Katherine of Aragon, solidifying the alliance between England and Castille, when they are both struck down with the infamous sudor anglicus, better known as the sweating sickness.
In the history books as we know it, fifteen-year-old Arthur succumbs to the illness, leaving Katherine - and England - at the mercy of Arthur's younger brother, the future King Henry VIII.
But what if Arthur Tudor had not died on that fateful day?
What if he had survived and lived on to become the next King of England, as he had been born to be?
Would England face the same political, domestic, and religious struggles as it did under Henry VIII? Would Henry VIII's six famous wives face similar fates?
Step into this alternative Tudor historical fiction and explore the life King Arthur of England could have led, with Katherine of Aragon by his side and the unknown future ahead, in 'The Rose and the Pomegranate'.