Just Finished Reading :
Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir
Such a brief synopsis does little credit to this tale of
parental ambition in a very dangerous age. Not only are such schemes inherently
dangerous in that they must overcome the schemes of others but such things can
all too easily be seen as treason – a crime that all too often ends with the
plotters heads on spikes on the walls of the Tower of London. If this was not
enough in itself this is a time of religious upheaval when the new religion of
Protestantism is in the process of ousting the old religion of Catholicism from
centre stage. As each contender for the throne cleaves to one faith or the
other the consequences of a ‘wrong’ monarch taking the throne would be
calamitous to the opposing side. Weir is a world class historian who has turned
her hand to the historical novel. In her first outing she impressed me with the
feeling of realism that carries the reader through the book. Tudor England
seems both alien and yet strangely familiar. I had a vague knowledge of the
time gleamed from half-remembered school lesions and a smattering of movies,
plays and documentaries of the period. I now think I know a lot more of what
was going on in those very violent times. I never realised, until reading this
novel, just how fraught with danger royal succession was. Backing the wrong
contender could quite literally result in you losing your head. The tragic
figure of Lady Jane Grey was one I had heard of but, again until reading this
novel, I had no idea just how tragic her very short life really was. Pushed
into a situation she clearly wanted no part in, her power hungry parents put
her in an impossible position which resulted in dire consequences whilst she
was still in her teens. Although I realised that children of the aristocracy
where expected to grow up fast in those days I never realised that their
childhoods were so compressed. Jane had an awful life – despite her very
privileged background. In another time or place she might have made a real contribution
to the world. Instead she was the victim of the ambition of others and paid the
price for being a suitable bride for a future king.
4 comments:
Glad you enjoyed; was this your first Weir novel?
Yes. I bought this and 'The Lady Elizabeth' together in a book deal at my local supermarket.
I'm looking forward to reading her other two and then maybe branching out into her straight history works.
I keep meaning to read more of her histories (beyond the biography of Elizabeth) but invariably forget to look once I get upstairs to nonfiction! "The Lady Elizabeth" was my introduction to Weir.
I've just discovered a new series of history books and finished the first one of them today. They'll mainly be about European history (including Britain) so will probably interest you a lot.
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