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Mary and Elizabeth, the two young princesses, have a common goal: to be Queen of England. To achieve this, they need both to win the love of the people and learn how to negotiate dangerous political pitfalls. Gregory recreates this era with tremendous colour, and she makes the court an enticing but danger-fraught place. Into this setting comes the eponymous fool, the youthful Hannah, who (despite her air of guileless religiousness) is not naive. She soon finds herself having to deal with the beguiling but treacherous Robert Dudley. Dispatched to report on Princess Mary, Hannah discovers in her a passionate religious conviction (to return England to the rule of Rome and its pope) that will have fatal consequences.
From Tolstoy's War and Peace onwards, historical novelists have set fictitious characters among real-life personages with mixed success; the author's creations can often pale beside the historical figures. That is emphatically not the case here, and Gregory ensures that all her characters have a full and teeming life. Expect a major movie: something as colourful and exuberant as The Queen's Fool is a natural for screen adaptation. --Barry Forshaw --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Praise for Philppa Gregory:
‘Gregory's research is impeccable which makes her imaginative fiction all the more convincing.’ Daily Mail
‘Gregory is great at conjuring a Tudor film-set of gorgeous gowns and golden-lattered dining. She invokes some swoonsome images…while the politics are personal enough to remain pertinent.’ DailyTelegraph
‘Subtle and exciting.’ Daily Express
‘Written from instinct, not out of calculation, and it shows.’
Peter Ackroyd, The Times
‘For sheer pace and percussive drama it will take a lot of beating.’ Sunday Times
--This text refers to the Unknown Binding edition.
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But from the moment I opened it I could not put it down. The story flows so easily that before I knew it I had read 30 pages.
It is based in Tudor England. A time of great change and upheaval. Hannah is a little girl who has come to England with her father to flee the Spanish Inquisition. Her mother had been burned at the stake for being a heretic.
Hannah has a gift. A gift of the Sight. Something that could place her in great danger in such uncertain times. But luckily a Lord of the Kings court stumbles upon Hannah and her gift and takes her into his employment as the Kings Fool.
The rest is...history.
It wasn't just the story that captured my imagination but the backdrop of Tudor England. Being British myself I have visited many of the castles and houses mentioned in the Queens Fool so I was able to picture the settings with great accuracy. My Grandfather once took me to Hever Castle. I was standing in a room on a bit of old carpet. He told me to close my eyes and said "Charlotte, just think. King Henry the Eighth once walked across the floor you are standing on now". It sent shivers down my spine. My Grandfather gave me a love of British history and The Queens Fool has ignited that once again.
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