Showing posts with label HenryVIII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HenryVIII. Show all posts

Friday, 5 December 2025

Author Guest Post - Helene Harrison - #author #guestpost


It is my great pleasure to welcome author, Helene Harrison, to the blog today. Helene is going to be talking to us about why she thinks we are still so fascinated with Anne Boleyn.

If you missed my review of her latest book, The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception, you can find it here.

Welcome Helene.


Why are we still so fascinated with Anne Boleyn?

Firstly, thank you so much for having me on your blog, Annie! My third and most recent book is called The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception so today I thought I’d offer some of my thoughts on why we are so fascinated with Anne Boleyn. None of the others of Henry VIII’s six wives get so much attention, or so many books written about them. Even books which cover all six wives, the majority is Katherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn with the other four wives condensed into the last third or quarter of the book. 

The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception by Helene Harrison [2025].

So, what about Anne Boleyn makes us so enthralled by her story? Well one thing is the sheer drama of her rise and fall. The fact that Henry VIII annulled his first marriage to Katherine of Aragon and broke with the Roman Catholic Church in order to marry Anne, means that she was a very controversial person by the time of her coronation on 1 June 1533. But less than three years later when she was arrested for multiple adulteries, incest with her brother, and treason, her reputation disintegrated further. Anne Boleyn basically became taboo on her execution.

However, her life and reputation have been both rehabilitated and attacked over the nearly 500 years since her death. For me, in choosing to write this book on Anne Boleyn, I consciously decided that I didn’t want to write a traditional biography, but more of a study of how her image and reputation have been tackled over 500 years. The fact that we have Anne recurring through 500 years gives a sense of how much her story means to people – we don’t have the same interest in the other wives, or even in other consorts or regnant monarchs from across time!

Today, we have popular culture. The popularity of the likes of Philippa Gregory, or Showtime’s The Tudors, or Wolf Hall, or SIX The Musical, brings Anne Boleyn and Tudor history to new audiences. We are spoiled in the modern age with television, film, theatre, and a glut of historical novels. Anne Boleyn is a prime candidate for featuring because of the drama of both her rise and fall, as well as her position as the mother of Elizabeth I, often considered to be England’s first successful queen regnant, paving the way for later ruling queens like Victoria and Elizabeth II.  

Anne Boleyn, mid-16th century, at Hever Castle and Gardens, Kent, England.

The lack of concrete knowledge about Anne Boleyn is also intriguing. Once people start digging into her life, they want facts but that often isn’t possible. We don’t know when Anne was born, what she really looked like, whether she really did hold Henry VIII at arm’s length for seven years, or how many pregnancies she underwent during her marriage. The portraits and images we have of her are all from after her death, aside from a crude sketch from her coronation banquet which doesn’t show any features, and a portrait medal from 1534 which has been damaged. The most popular images we think of are later creations. Not knowing her year of birth (estimates vary from 1501 to 1507 generally) means that we don’t know her age at significant events. The state of her relationship with the king is something that intrigues everyone who looks at her life, specifically Henry VIII’s involvement in her downfall.

What we find so alluring about Anne Boleyn is that she is a bit of an enigma, surrounded by drama, and ripe for modern entertainment drama. But we need to remember that Anne was a real person, who really was beheaded on the orders of her husband, a mother who lost at least two children, and spent years serving a queen, only to replace her on the throne. We will never be able to know or understand what she was feeling because times have changed hugely. We need to be careful not to put 21st century thoughts and feelings onto a 16th century woman. Anne Boleyn will no doubt continue to fascinate, and I hope that my book, The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception, will give some insight into how some of the myths about Anne came to be, and why I don’t think interpretations of Anne will ever stop – we just need to dig down into what we actually do know and strip away the layers of myth and perception to try and get closer to the real Anne Boleyn.

Thank you for being my guest on the blog today. That was so interesting and I thought your book was fascinating.


More About the Author

Helene Harrison studied at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle, achieving both a BA and MA in History before going on to complete an MSc in Library Management. Her passion for Tudor history started when studying for A Levels and completing a module on Tudor rebellions. Her master’s dissertation focused on portrayals of Anne Boleyn through the centuries, from contemporary letters to modern TV and film adaptations. Now she writes two blogs, one Tudor history and one book-related, and works in the university library of her alma mater. In her spare time, she loves visiting royal palaces and snuggling up with a book or embroidery project. Her books are ‘Elizabethan Rebellions: Conspiracy, Intrigue and Treason’ (2023), ‘Tudor Executions: From Nobility to the Block’ (2024) and ‘The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception’ (2025), all published by Pen and Sword.


Purchase Links to Helene's Publications

‘Elizabethan Rebellions: Conspiracy, Intrigue and Treason’ (2023)

Bookshop.org   Pen & Sword

 ‘Tudor Executions: From Nobility to the Block’ (2024) 

Bookshop.org     Pen & Sword

 ‘The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception’ (2025)

Bookshop.org    Pen & Sword


"Small Business Saturday weekender! Buy ANY book 5-7 Dec, and you could win a £250 Bookshop.org digital gift card. Every sale supports independent bookshops: Bookshop.org"




(media courtesy of the author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Thursday, 4 December 2025

The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception by Helene Harrison - #bookreview


Anne Boleyn is an absolutely fascinating figure in English history...


The Blurb

Mistress. Queen. Reformer. Traitor. Icon. 

This book is not like any others you might have read on Anne Boleyn. It is not a biography of the life of Henry VIII’s second wife and queen. What this book does is to examine Anne Boleyn through images and perceptions of her. Through documents, letters, images, propaganda, films, novels and historical biographies, this book explores Anne Boleyn through more than 500 years of history. 

Explore how perceptions of her have changed and developed over time. Whether she is seen as a mistress, a queen, a mother, a reformer, a traitor, or a tragic heroine, Anne Boleyn continues to inspire so much exploration and even new discoveries today. See Anne through the eyes of people who knew her, loved her, hated her, and studied her. 

In the present day, Anne Boleyn has quite a devoted scholarship, honed through perceptions built over the last half a millennium. Her life, reign, and tragic death at the hands of the man who tore England apart to be with her have made Anne Boleyn one of the most divisive and exciting figures in English history. 


My Review

Before I even begin to review this book, I want to let you know that tomorrow the author of this fantastic book, Helene Harrison, will be here on the blog, talking about why we are still so fascinated by Anne Boleyn. Having read this book, I couldn't be more excited to hear from her.

Once in a while I read a book on my Kindle that I love so much that it makes me want to buy a physical copy to have on my bookshelves, that I can take down and dip into whenever I want to. This was one such book.

It begins with an excellent foreword by Dr. Owen Emmerson, who is a historian, author and Assistant Curator at the childhood home of Anne Boleyn at Hever Castle in Kent.

Published in July of this year, the book takes a slightly different path to many books in the Anne Boleyn canon. It is based on the author's Master's degree research, whereby she considered the different interpretations of Anne Boleyn through history by drawing on both historical sources and historiography. She uses both primary and secondary sources, as well as an array of articles, books and paintings. In addition, she looks at how Anne is presented on stage and screen and in fiction and non-fiction alike.

The book is divided into twelve chapters, and I think it is worth providing the title headings here in order to demonstrate the breadth of the interpretation through the sources.

Chapter 1 - Portraiture and Image

Chapter 2 - Anne as Mistress

Chapter 3 - Anne as Queen and Mother

Chapter 4 - Anne as Traitor

Chapter 5 -  Anne Through Foreign Eyes

Chapter 6 - Anne as Reformer

Chapter 7 - Anne as Tragic Heroine

Chapter 8 - Anne on Stage

Chapter 9 - Anne on Film

Chapter 10 - Anne on the Small Screen

Chapter 11 - Anne on the Page

Chapter 12 - Historiography

This was an interesting and informative book to read, which has been written in a highly accessible and approachable manner. Ms Harrison has looked at Anne Boleyn with fresh eyes and considers how she has been interpreted through the centuries, from the plays of Shakespeare to the modern interpretation of Anne in the stage show, The Six. Whether the reader is a relative newcomer to Tudor history or an academic, I believe that there is something for everyone in this book.

For me, the sign of a good book, whether it is fiction or non-fiction, is when it makes me want to go away and learn more about the subject. Although I am a history graduate, I focused on modern history and only touched on the subject of the Tudors. Of course, I have read much about them since my studies were completed. However, this book has left me with a thirst to learn more, and I suspect that it will have a similar effect on many of its readers.

The author's research is extensive and included is a long bibliography which I will definitely be looking into for further reading. The book also has a selection of images which were interesting when viewed alongside the text.

I don't want to finish this review without telling you a personal story about Hever Castle. A couple of years ago, I celebrated a big birthday and arranged a whole family trip there - complete with husband, sons, their wives, grandchildren, and not forgetting the family dogs. Throughout the day, we visited all of it, from the castle to the coffee shop, taking it in turns to do the parts not suitable for dogs. 

Hever Castle really worked its magic on my granddaughter that day, who was about nine at the time. Not only did she fall in love with the castle but also with history itself. I couldn't be more proud.

This is an intelligent book which is easy to read. I highly recommend it to lovers of history.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1036105020

Publisher: Pen & Sword

Formats:  e-book and hardback

No. of Pages:  296 (hardback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Pen & Sword Books

Blackwell's

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Helene Harrison studied at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle, achieving both a BA and MA in History before going on to complete an MSc in Library Management. Her passion for Tudor history started when studying for A Levels and completing a module on Tudor rebellions. Her master’s dissertation focused on portrayals of Anne Boleyn through the centuries, from contemporary letters to modern TV and film adaptations. Now she writes two blogs, one Tudor history and one book-related, and works in the university library of her alma mater. In her spare time, she loves visiting royal palaces and snuggling up with a book or embroidery project. Her books are ‘Elizabethan Rebellions: Conspiracy, Intrigue and Treason’ (2023), ‘Tudor Executions: From Nobility to the Block’ (2024) and ‘The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception’ (2025), all published by Pen and Sword.

You can also find Helene at:

Author Website

Substack

Facebook

Instagram

Bluesky

Threads



(ARC and media courtesy of the author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Thursday, 11 May 2023

Henry VIII: The Heart and the Crown by Alison Weir - #bookreview @AlisonWeir

 

1503 - He had cried for hours. Mother, his dearest Mother, was dead. It had been the most hateful, dreadful news, broken to him by Mrs Luke, his old nurse. Not, thankfully, by Father, who was too broken by his own grief. Harry could not have coped with witnessing the King's distress. He had enough to bear. He had wept and wept on Mrs Luke's broad bosom, and now, aware that great boys of eleven were not supposed to give way to wamanish tears, he struggled to compose himself and went to find his sisters, who were sitting desolately on the rug before the fire in Mother's bedchamber. He stared in horror at the bed, which had already been hung and draped with the black velvet of mourning. Mother would never sleep here again; he would never more hear her sweet voice, feel her gentle arms around him, her golden boy...

***

Six wives. One King. You know their stories. Now it's time to hear his.

A second son, not born to rule, becomes a man, and a king...

In grand royal palaces, Prince Harry grows up dreaming of knights and chivalry - and the golden age of kings that awaits his older brother. But Arthur's untimely death sees Harry crowned King Henry of England.

As his power and influence extends, so commences a lifelong battle between head and heart, love and duty. Henry rules by divine right, yet his prayers for a son go unanswered.

The great future of the Tudor dynasty depends on an heir. And the crown weighs heavy on a king with all but his one true desire.

HENRY VIII. HIS STORY.

***

This book is the second part of The Tudor Rose series. The first, The Last White Rose, follows the life of Henry VIII's mother Elizabeth of York . I have not read that book and it did not hinder my reading and enjoyment of this second one. I am assuming that the first covers the time up to Henry's birth as The Heart and the Crown picks up the story in 1503 when the young Henry would have been about twelve years of age.

Of course, the story of Henry VIII and his six wives is a familiar one but it was interesting to read this which is told from his own perspective. Having read several of the books in the authors Six Tudor Queens series, this is the perfect companion book.

Ms. Weir describes Henry in a way which is compelling and believable. This comes as no great surprise as her books, both fiction and non-fiction, are always expertly researched. She has previously written much about the Tudor period, and as readers we can rest assured that she will present the world with a book which is as historically accurate as is possible within the realms of fiction.

It is a lengthy book at 640 pages and is sedately paced. What I appreciated most about this book is that we see Henry VIII in all his guises. Not just Henry, the tyrant king of popular history, but we also observe Henry, the man, lover, husband, father, king and politician. We see the human side of Henry that can only come alive in this way in a fictional retelling of his story.

It is an ambitious novel which the author has pulled off successfully and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

If you would like to read my reviews from some of the Six Queen series, you can read my review of Anne Boleyn: A King's Obsession by clicking here, Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen  by clicking here, my review of Anna of Kleve: Queen of Secrets by clicking here.

ISBN:  978 1472278081

Publisher:  Headline Review

Formats:  e-book, audio and hardback

No. of Pages:  640 (hardback)

Support Independent Bookshops - Purchase from Bookshop.org


About the Author:

Alison Weir is a British writer of history books for the general public, mostly in the form of biographies about British kings and queens, and of historical fiction. Before becoming an author, Weir worked as a teacher of children with special needs. She received her formal training in history at teacher training college. 

She currently lives in Surrey, England, with her two children.

You can find out more about Alison at her website: http://alisonweir.org.uk/index.php


(ARC courtesy of the publisher)

Support Independent Bookshops - Buy from Bookshop.org

*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.

Wednesday, 26 April 2023

Reading Roundup for April 2023

 April has definitely begun to feel more like spring. There has been a good mixture of sunshine and rain. It is making everything in the garden grow like crazy and we have even had a few days when the weather has been kind enough to enable us to get out and tackle the weeds which are making themselves known.

The highlight of my month was going to the theatre in Eastbourne to see author, Tracy Borman, in her roadshow, How to Be a Good Monarch. It was a fantastic show and if it is showing anywhere near you then I highly reccomend it.

Have you done anything exciting or interesting this month?

Have you read any good books? I have read a mixture of the great, the good and the average this month.


Books I Have Read

Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart - This was a re-read for me and it was every bit as brilliant as the first time I read it.

Ascension by Oliver Harris - This was the choice of my book group this month. The majority of the group really liked it. It was a good book, well written for it's genre but it just wasn't my cup of tea.

The Little Venice Bookshop by Rebecca Raisin - I read this as part of the book tour and enjoyed it very much. You can read my review by clicking here.

Night Wherever We Go by Tracy Rose Peyton - This was an excellent book, set in Texas in 1852. Well worth reading and you can read my review by clicking here.

The Wonderland Murders by Millie Ravensworth - This cosy crime mystery was an easy read and part of another book tour. You can access my review by clicking here.

The Viscount's Daring Miss by Lotte R. James - A lovely bit of escapist reading and you can access my review by clicking here.

The Best Minds: A Story of Friendship, Madness, and the Tragedy of Good Intentions by Jonathan Rosen - This non-fiction title was really interesting. It's difficult to describe in a few words so please read the full review by clicking here.

Ada's Realm by Sharon Dodua Otoo - This was a complex novel which took a little working at. It was extremely good though and you can read my review by clicking here.

The Fortune Men by Nadifa Mohamed - This was my favourite book this month and I cannot say enough good things about it. Please read my full review by clicking here.

Foxash by Kate Worsley - I only finished reading this yesterday but I plan to get my review written today ready for uploading tomorrow.

Caring Conservationists by Kate Peridot - Another book I finished only yesterday and my review will be up by the end of the week.


Books I Am Partway Through

Henry VIII: The Heart and the Crown by Alison Weir

Through Three Rooms by Sven Elvestad

James I: The King Who United Scotland and England by Keith Coleman

Thursday, 12 January 2023

Anna of Kleve: Queen of Secrets by Alison Weir - #BookReview

Anna peered through the window of the gatehouse, watching the chariot trundling through below, enjoying the rich sensuousness of the new silk gown she was wearing, and conscious of her parents' expectations of her. At fourteen, she should have learned all the domestic graces, and to impress their guests with her virtues.

Every summer, Vater - or Duke Johann III, as his subjects knew him - broght his wife and children here to the Schwaneburg, the great palace that towered on a steep rocky hill, dominating the mighty River Rhine and the fair city of Kleve. Joining them today for a short visit, were Onkel Otho von Wylich, the genial Lord of Gennep, and Tante Elisabeth, who never let anyone forget that she was the granddaughter of Duke Johann I. With them would be Otho, Onkel's bastard son...

***


This is the fourth part in the Six Tudor Queens series. I have read it's three predecessors and thoroughly enjoyed them all. However, I think that this one has been my favourite so far as Anna of Kleves (which has been anglicised to Anne of Cleves) is probably the one of Henry VIII's queens which I knew least about.

I think that the author, Alison Weir, does a marvellous job of taking the historical facts and then weaving a fictional story around them. There is much poetic licence applied to this book and Ms. Weir provides an interesting author's note at the back in which she explains her use of fact and fiction. 

However, it is this use of fiction which makes this an engrossing and entertaining read. The author is a well respected historian who has many non-fiction titles in her canon, but it is her skill as a storyteller that makes her historical re-tellings so accessible to the reader.

Having read this book my respect for Anna increased enormously. She handled being set aside by Henry with dignity and wisdom, and was known as his 'sister' henceforth. I should imagine that Henry's relief of her willingness to accept the situation after his experience with Katherine of Aragon was enormous. Consequently, Henry treated her well and provided for her financially in every area until the time of his death.

The thing that I have enjoyed enormously in this series is the overlap of Henry's Queens. Anna comes to her marriage with the knowledge of Henry's divorce from Katherine of Aragon, the execution of Anne Boleyn and the death of Jane Seymour. During this book we meet Katherine Howard and witness Anna's reaction to her execution. She also witnessed Henry's sixth marriage to Catherine Parr and her death in 1548. Anna outlived all five of the other queens, dying in 1557 and being the only one of the six to be buried in Westminster Abbey.

I am very much looking forward to reading the next volume in this series, Katheryn Howard: The Tainted Queen.

I did not review the first volume at the time of reading but if you would like to read my review of Anne Boleyn: A King's Obsession or Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen you can do so by clicking on the titles links.

Buy from Bookshop.org

About the Author:

Alison Weir is a British writer of history books and has sold over 2.7 millions books worldwide. She has published eighteen history books, including her most recent non-fiction book, Queens of the Conquest, the first in her England's Medieval Queens quartet. Alison has also published several historical novels, including Innocent Traitor and The Lady Elizabeth. 

Anna of Kleve: Queen of Secrets is her third novel in the Six Tudor Queens series about the wives of Henry VIII, which was launched in 2016 to great critical acclaim. Alison is an honorary life patron of Historic Royal Palaces.


*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.

Friday, 10 June 2022

Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen by Alison Weir - #BookReview

 

"A health to the bride!" Sir John Seymour smiled and raised his goblet as the company echoed his toast.

Jane sipped her wine, watching as her new sister-in-law blushed prettily. Edward seemed besotted with his new wife. At seventeen, Catherine was a very comely girl, a year younger than he. Jane has been surprised at how practised she was at the art of coquetry, and how warmly the men were looking at her. Even Father seemed to be under her spell. Catherine's father, Sir William Fillol, was leaning back in his chair replete, looking well pleased with the match - as he should be, for Edward, being Father's heir, had good prospects and the determination to do well. Even at the age of ten, Jane knew that for an ambitious young man, marriage to the well-bred co-heiress of a wealthy landowner would be a great advantage.

***


THE WOMAN HAUNTED BY THE FATE OF HER PREDECESSOR.

Eleven days after the death of Anne Boleyn, Jane is dressing for her wedding to the King.

She has witnessed at first hand how courtly play can quickly turn to danger and knows she must bear a son . . . or face ruin.

This new Queen must therefore step out from the shadows cast by Katherine and Anne. In doing so, can she expose a gentler side to the brutal King?

JANE SEYMOUR

THE THIRD OF HENRY'S QUEENS

HER STORY

Acclaimed, bestselling historian Alison Weir draws on new research for her captivating novel, which paints a compelling portrait of Jane and casts fresh light on both traditional and modern perceptions of her. Jane was driven by the strength of her faith and a belief that she might do some good in a wicked world.

History tells us how she died.

This spellbinding novel explores the life she lived.

***

I am enjoying reading this series of books very much. This is the third in the Six Tudor Queens series. I have read the previous two, Katherine of Aragon: The True Queen and Anne Boleyn: A King's Obsession. You can read my review of the second book by clicking here.

One thing that I am particularly enjoying from these books is the overlap between them. For example, Jane Seymour was initially one of the maids of honour to both Katherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn. Therefore, the reader has the opportunity to follow each of Henry VIII's Queens in their individual context and place within the royal court.

As we can expect of Ms. Weir, the novel has been extensively researched. We can rely on the fact that this fictionalised account is set around real events and which affords the novel some gravitas.

I very much admired Jane's commitment to Katherine and how she maintained her view of Katherine as Queen, even when Henry had set her aside and married Anne Boleyn. However, and this is not a criticism of the book, I found it hard to believe that Jane remained as trusting of Henry when she had not merely observed, but lived in the royal court and seen the way in which he had treated his previous two wives.

However, the author did a great job of portraying Jane's quiet determination to appeal to Henry's better nature about the execution of Anne Boleyn and his treatment of his daughters, Mary and Elizabeth. What was equally well portrayed through both Jane and Anne, was the way in which women were used as pawns for the advancement of men in their families.

Excellently written in an accessible style, Ms. Weir has brought another of Henry VIII's Queens expertly to life. I will definitely be reading the next in the series, Anna of Kleve: The Princess in the Portrait very soon.

ISBN: 978 1472227713

Publisher: Headline Review

Formats: e-book, audio, hardback and paperback

No. of Pages: 544 (paperback)

About the Author:

Alison Weir is a British writer of history books and has sold over 2.7 millions books worldwide. She has published eighteen history books, including her most recent non-fiction book, Queens of the Conquest, the first in her England's Medieval Queens quartet. Alison has also published several historical novels, including Innocent Traitor and The Lady Elizabeth. 

Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen is her third novel in the Six Tudor Queens series about the wives of Henry VIII, which was launched in 2016 to great critical acclaim. Alison is an honorary life patron of Historic Royal Palaces.

Tuesday, 13 April 2021

Anne Boleyn: A King's Obsession - # 2 Six Tudor Queens Series - #BookReview

 

"Her skin was rather sallow, Anne thought as she studied herself in the silver mirror, and she had too many moles, but at least her face was a fashionable oval. At eleven she had no womanly figure to speak of, but that hopefully would change in the next year or so. "

The young woman who changed the course of history.

Fresh from the palaces of Burgundy and France, Anne Boleyn draws attention at the English court, embracing the play of courtly love. But when the King commands, nothing is ever a game.

Yet Anne has a spirit worthy of a crown - and the crown is what she seeks, at any price. And as she embarks on her perilous course, a kingdom risks being torn apart.

The second of Henry's queens. This is her story.

History tells us how she died. This powerful novel shows her as she lived.

***

I have previously read the first in this series of books, Katherine of Aragon: The True Queen, which I enjoyed very much. Therefore, reading this second book in the series was a natural progression.

History tells us so little about women. However, as one would expect from a fine writer such as Alison Weir, she has drawn heavily on the primary sources and has made some very educated interpretations regarding the wives of Henry the VIII in this marvellous series of books. 

Her extensive research is evident throughout. The level of detail makes the story wholly credible. It is fiction that reads as if it were fact whilst never losing it's easy readability.

One thing that I really liked is the way that she describes the happenings from the differing perspectives of Henry's queens. I really admire the way that each of the stories seamlessly introduces the next queen into life at court. In the first book, we see the arrival of Anne Boleyn as one of the ladies in waiting to Queen Katherine. Similarly, Jane Seymour is installed as a lady in waiting to Queen Anne, as per the actual historical situation.

However, because the reader already understands the significance that the introduction of these women will have on history, I found becoming really involved in the novel and wanting to warn the queen. Such was my involvement that there were frequent occasions throughout my reading of this book when I wanted to say to Anne Boleyn, "don't do that" or "don't say that" as I understood the future significance of her words and actions.

Writing this series is a hugely ambitious undertaking on the part of the author and she manages, through her writing, to make history a living, tangible experience for the reader.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys history or historical fiction. I will be getting my order placed for the third book in the series, Jane Seymour: The Haunted Queen, immediately as I can not wait to read about Henry's third queen.

ISBN: 978 1472227669

Publisher: Headline Review


About the Author:

Alison Weir is a British writer of history books and has sold over 2.7 millions books worldwide. She has published eighteen history books, including her most recent non-fiction book, Queens of the Conquest, the first in her England's Medieval Queens quartet. Alison has also published several historical novels, including Innocent Traitor and The Lady Elizabeth. 

Anne Boleyn: A King's Obsession is her second novel in the Six Tudor Queens series about the wives of Henry VIII, which was launched in 2016 to great critical acclaim. Alison is an honorary life patron of Historic Royal Palaces.


*Disclosure: I only recommend books I would buy myself and all opinions expressed here are my own. This post contains an affiliate link from which I may earn a small commission.