Elizabeth, the Queen

ClanBrandon Books
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Alison Weir

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Pages: 543 (Paperback)

ISBN: 0712673121

Pub: Pimlico

Pub date: 2005-09-01

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1371

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Editorial Review:


Elizabeth I survived to become queen by being very careful. The fact that she avoided being used or implicated by the various plots against her radically Protestant brother Henry VIII, and fanatically Catholic sister Mary I, was a triumph in itself, and she never forgot the lesson that survival needed to be her first goal. What many of her contemporaries took for irritating womanly indecision was a refusal to be hurried; some situations change and some go away, but you can never escape the consequences of your actions--she protected Mary, Queen of Scots for as long as she could.

Alison Weir's new biography covers the facts well enough, but she understands Elizabeth's situation imaginatively, and that is what makes her book special. Elizabeth not only overcame the misogyny of the world she lived in--she exploited it; Weir's own feminism gives her insights into the canny role-playing that was so crucial to Elizabeth's chameleon nature. Everything had to be policy from wigs and fans to rack and gallows; this is a biography which understands not only what happened, but how it seemed and felt at the time. This is an excellent conclusion to Weir's series of Tudor biographies--popular history which brings good sense to bear on scholarly fact. --Roz Kaveney

Reader Reviews:


5/5 stars

Great non-fiction read. (1/1 people found this helpful)

I was totally hooked on this book right from the start, although I usually read historical novels rather than non-fiction. It is so well written and descriptive that I felt I was an eye-witness at the Tudor court. If only school history lessons had been so interesting!

4/5 stars

Very sympathetic portrayal of Elizabeth (8/8 people found this helpful)

Alison Weir writes a very engaging and sympathetic account of Queen Elizabeth, taking the reader right into the heart of Renaissance England and Elizabeth's splendid court. This is a vivid portrait of Elizabeth and her relationship with her rivals, suitors, courtiers, subjects, foreign diplomats and enemies. All aspects of court life are covered, from social relations and life at court, to war and the politics of 16th century England, thus providing not just an engaging biography but also a journey in time, taking the reader back 500 years to an England at once imperial, majestic, and in the midst of civil political turmoil. One star less because I feel as if not enough space was given to Elizabeth's relationship and dealings with Mary Tudor or the character and motifs of the Earl of Essex, the uprising of the latter being glossed over very quickly and in little detail, despite Essex's influential role at court.

5/5 stars

Deeply compelling (20/23 people found this helpful)

I have read many of Alison Weirs' books (the latest being the Princes in the Tower) and can not fault her. Aside from her exquisite ability to transport you to an age where the ruler of a country was all powerful. She guides and teaches you about the person and era in which the book is based.

This book in particuar is a "just can't put it down" book. There is everything. Murder, intrigue, treachery, love and even a bit of comedy (I found the thought off essex walking though london yelling for people to take arms against the queen and noone responding as most humerous). Fact is without doubt better than fiction.

Buy this book and you won't be disappointed and I guarentee this will not be the last Alison Weir book you shall buy.

5/5 stars

A most enthralling read (21/28 people found this helpful)

I found Alison's book one of, if not the best I have ever read on Elizabeth, whom I find quite the most fascinating heroine of any age.I disappeared into the book and was transported to her court.Fabulous.

5/5 stars

An insight into Elisabeth as she must have been (26/26 people found this helpful)

This book, like all others by Alison Weir on the Tudor period, was a delight. The author manages to bring the reader so close to Elisabeth that I really had the feeling I was getting to know her. Particularly enjoyable is the way Weir produces historical evidence : she provides several contemporary accounts on an issue, explains why one account seems to be more reliable that the other - and in the process, never does the record get tedious or scholarly, which in itself is a feat. This approach only gives the impression of a very neutral, objective account - which adds tremendous force to the whole story. And what style, what elegance! A pleasure to read. A great, enjoyable book, which I warmly recommend to anybody interested in history.

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Categories

Amazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:

Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> British Royalty -> Elizabeth I
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> Historical -> 1001-1500
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> Historical -> Britain -> Norman to Medieval: 1001-1500
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Britain & Ireland -> Norman and Medieval 1001-1500
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Britain & Ireland -> British Heads of State -> Elizabeth I
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Other Historical Subjects -> Historians -> Weir, Alison
Books -> Subjects -> History -> World History -> 1501-1750
Books -> Subjects -> History -> General
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback

 

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