by Anna Whitelock (Author)
Mary Tudor was the first woman to be crowned queen of England. Her accession, in the summer of 1553, took place against the odds and it was, in many ways, emblematic of her life. Anna Whitelock's assured, impassioned and absorbing debut tells the remarkable story of a woman who was a princess one minute, feted by the courts of Europe, and a disinherited bastard the next. It tells of her Spanish heritage, the unbreakable bond between Mary and her mother (Katherine of Aragon), her childhood, her adolescence, her rivalry with her sister Elizabeth, and finally her womanhood. It explores the formative experiences that made Mary the determined and single-minded queen she became. She had fought to survive, fought to preserve her integrity and her right to hear the Catholic mass, and finally she fought for the throne. As queen of England, Mary retained her tenacity. She married Philip of Spain against much opposition and struggled passionately to restore Catholicism, the religion to which she had remained true all her life. Yet whilst she was brave as a queen, as a woman she was dependent and prone to anxiety. In an age when marriages were made for political and diplomatic advantage, Mary married a man she truly loved but whom did not share her passion. It is this tension between Mary's dominance as queen and her tragedy as a woman that is crucial to understanding her reign. Her private traumas of phantom pregnancies, debilitating illnesses and unrequited love were played out in the public glare of the fickle Tudor court. The Mary that emerges is not the weak-willed failure of traditional narratives, but a complex figure of immense courage, determination and humanity. Anna Whitelock's biography is an assured, impassioned and absorbing debut.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Edition: Airport and Export ed
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 04 May 2009
ISBN 10: 1408803577
ISBN 13: 9781408803578
Book Overview: This book will be dramatised in a three-part TV series, to be aired in 2010. Paperback publication will coincide with this. For anyone interested in Tudor history, and for fans of Georgiana by Amanda Foreman, Perdita by Paula Byrne and Courtesans by Katie Hickman. It will also appeal to readers of Philippa Gregory's novels. Anna Whitelock is a bright, talented, extremely promotable historian and has written for the Guardian