Loved it, loved it. This second book takes us from the beginning of Catherine's marriage to Henry VIII, to her death, and in this book, as in the previous one, Gemma Lawrence shows us a different Catherine from the one so often portrayed; a young woman ill-educated, but not without intelligence and understanding of people. A woman who knew what she must do to survive, until those who resented her position whispered the words that would bring about her downfall.
At the end of the book, Ms Lawrence's notes give her educated opinion about many of the fictions and assumptions told down the years, about this fifth wife of Henry. For instance, she never said that she would rather die as the wife of Thomas Culpepper than live as the wife of the King, and it is unlikely that she had the raging physical affair with Culpepper as portrayed, for instance, in Showtime's The Tudors. We actually have very little factual knowledge about her.
Lawrence's Catherine talks much about the lot of women in that period in which she lived, and about the men who abused her (Manox and Dereham): Their greatest power is our silence. An echo through time, of all women too scared to speak out about abuse, both mental and physical. This aspect, though, is not rammed down the reader's throat; it's just a cracking good read, in which I was totally engrossed all the way through. The historical detail paints perfect pictures, both of the way in which the people lived, and England itself (I loved reading about the Progress, the buildings, the countryside). The sense of suspense when Catherine doesn't know that she is far from safe is real page-turning stuff.
Excellent two book series. Highly recommended.
- Format: Kindle Edition
- File Size: 2816 KB
- Print Length: 486 pages
- Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
- Language: English
- ASIN: B07RWLLFPN
- Text-to-Speech:
Enabled
- Word Wise: Enabled
- Customer Reviews: 20 customer reviews
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Amazon Bestsellers Rank:
#44,454 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
- #111 in Biographical Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #123 in Historical Biographical Fiction
- #237 in Biographical Fiction (Books)
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