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Cargando... Sisters to the King (1998 original; edición 1998)por Maria Perry (Autor)
Información de la obraThe Sisters of Henry VIII: The Tumultuous Lives of Margaret of Scotland and Mary of France por Maria Perry (1998)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Eminently readable it might be, but there is far too much padding. Detailed lists of clothes, banquets and tournaments distract from the narrative. Furthermore for most of the last quarter of the book Mary and Margaret are sidelined as Perry goes over the familiar ground of the King's Great Matter. Neither woman really emerges as distinct personality, but it would have made a good book of some 150 pages or so. And I am now officially fed up of the Tudors. 3.5 stars This is a nonfiction account of the lives of Henry VIII's sisters. Margaret, his older sister, was married to James IV of Scotland. She moved there and married him at 13 years old. He died young, and Margaret went on to marry two more times. Henry's younger sister, Mary, was married off to the much older King of France, Louis XII. They were only married for a few months before he died, giving Mary a chance to return to England and marry the man she loved, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. I've only read a little bit of fiction about Mary, but nothing at all about Margaret till now, so this was interesting to hear what happened in Margaret's life after she left England (it was not an easy life for her). The book was good. Let's just say that it was not easy to be a woman in the 1500s. It was especially not easy to be a woman related to Henry VIII and a pawn in his plans for political gain. This telling of the stories of Margaret of Scotland (mother to James V), and Mary of France was an interesting at look at a period of time most often told from the male perspective. Well researched, but I wish there had been more to this book, which is a little thin considering the fascinating times in which these two women lived. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
The author of the highly acclaimed 'Elizabeth I' and the classic 'Knightsbridge Woman' presents an analysis of the fundamental role of Margaret, Queen of Scotland and Mary, Queen of France in the European power politics of the Tudor age. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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It's great to read about these two royal women, but this felt like a triad biography. Indeed, their brother Henry VIII received just as much (if not a little more) treatment as his sisters. We are given full and detailed accounts of his divorce trial, which saw him repudiate his first wife Catherine of Aragon. One wonders why. Neither sister was involved in the case. Looking back, it seems that the inclusion of many of the events featuring Henry VIII was filler information. This not very long book would've been much shorter without it.
That being said, it's a worthwhile addition to Tudor history books and an intriguing look at the courts of France and Scotland as they related to Henry VIII's sisters. ( )