The House of Boleyn

Kindle Edition, 368 pages

Langue : English

Publié par Atlantic Monthly Press.

ISBN :
978-0-8021-6786-6
ISBN copié !
Goodreads:
B0FWRB4KLM

Acclaimed Tudor historian Tracy Borman weaves the dramatic history of the Boleyn family into a richly imagined novel of ambition, bloodlines, and the opulent and deadly court of Henry VIII

When nobleman Thomas Boleyn, lord of Hever Castle, is called to London in 1509 to present himself to a newly anointed King Henry VIII, he sets in train events that ensure the Boleyn name will never be forgotten. His daughters Mary and Anne were young then, and though he was ambitious for his family to prosper, he could not imagine what would transpire in the two decades to come.

Blending the history she knows so well with the creativity of her imagination, Tracy Borman brings the Boleyn family’s three-decade rise and precipitous fall to vivid life. Borman surrounds the main dramatic events of the Boleyn saga with a colorful tableau in which familial and inter-familial rivalries threaten and …

2 éditions

I prefer Borman's nonfiction

The rise and fall of the Boleyn family’s fortunes, from their pinnacle achievement to the misery of their worst failure.

While I quite enjoyed Borman’s Cromwell biography, I didn’t care much for this novel following the house of Boleyn. The writing was fine, but I found the story messy and a little disjointed, skipping ahead in capricious ways. Had I not been relatively well-versed in the history of happenings at the Tudor court, I’m not sure that I’d have followed the timeline very well.

I also found a few of the characters' personalities too changeable, with no explanation given other than it suited the moment. The interwoven perspectives of the various servants and attendants felt extraneous, and crowbarred in, bogging down rather than enhancing the narrative. The author’s note explains her reasoning, and I see her point, but I just didn’t enjoy the result very much.

Sujets

  • Historical Fiction
  • Tudors