"Ms Wilcoxson does a good job of depicting the hurting, insecure Mary. She’s a bit like a fledgling, shoved out of the nest too soon and expected to fend for herself despite not being able to fly."
AMAZON UK
AMAZON UK
Biographical
Fiction
1500s / Mary
Tudor
England
Usually, books
set in the Tudor period tend to concentrate on two female protagonists, namely
Anne Boleyn and her daughter Elizabeth. Yes, there are the odd books about the
tragic Catherine of Aragon or some of Henry VIII’s other wives, but mostly it’s
about Anne and Elizabeth. Henry VIII’s eldest daughter—the girl he treated so
cruelly when he had his sights set on making many, many sons with Anne
Boleyn—has rarely been given much time in the limelight. No, Mary Tudor is
often treated as something of a parenthesis, far more interesting as a threat
to Elizabeth’s future potential than as a person in her own right.
In Queen of Martyrs, Ms Samantha Wilcoxson
presents us with a Mary of flesh and blood, a young woman permanently
traumatised by her father’s disowning of her mother and her subsequent
bastardisation. Mary is very young when everything she once took for granted is
taken from her—including her beloved mother. Instead, to really rub salt into
the wounds, Mary is dispatched to join Elizabeth’s household, there to wait on
the little princess that has usurped her place in her father’s affection. As we
all know, it didn’t take long until Henry subjected Elizabeth to a similar
degradation, but in difference to Mary, Elizabeth was too young to fully
comprehend how her status had changed. Mary, on the other hand, goes from being
secure in her role as her father’s only heir to being torn apart by
insecurities—her love for her father tainted by fear for what he might do to
her next.
Ms Wilcoxson
does a good job of depicting the hurting, insecure Mary. She’s a bit like a
fledgling, shoved out of the nest too soon and expected to fend for herself
despite not being able to fly. There is something very vulnerable and naïve
about this Mary, an innocence that she retains throughout her life. While I am
not entirely convinced the historical Mary was that much of an innocent, I
applaud Ms Wilcoxson for the effort she has put into painting this portrait of
a woman most of us dismiss as Bloody Mary.
It is patently
obvious Ms Wilcoxson knows her period and her protagonist. I like the little
details, the way rituals of the time are interwoven into the story. I enjoy the
insight offered into various minor characters, people who were staunchly loyal
to Mary throughout her life. I am intrigued by Ms Wilcoxson’s Elizabeth—a
calculating, careful woman who shows little emotion and who has her eyes firmly
set on the ultimate prize, the English throne.
Most of all, I
feel compassion for Mary and her lonely road through life. A woman who wanted
only to love and be loved was given little opportunity to do either. Her
husband, Philip II, beds her out of duty, and while she manages to deceive
herself into believing he loves her for a while, ultimately Mary is too
intelligent to fall for her own deception.
Writing a book
about Mary without approaching the infected issue of her persecution of
heretics is impossible. Ms Wilcoxon does not shy away from this difficult
subject and presents the reader with a Mary who sees it as her God-given duty
to cleanse England of the heresies that could potentially damn all her English
subjects to everlasting hell. Mary’s intense and personal relationship with God
is her one mainstay throughout her life. In a life markedly devoid of love and
affection, a life tinged by sorrows, this woman finds solace in the belief that
at least she is doing God’s bidding.
All in all, Queen of Martyrs offers interesting
insight into the personality of a woman who is easy to dismiss as a bigot.
There are times when the narrative could have been tighter, and now and then I
am distracted by the recurring POV slips, but overall I am impressed by Ms
Wilcoxson’s presentation of this proud and so very, very lonely queen.
© Anna Belfrage
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Now this looks like my kind of historical fiction! A lot more than the 'Pretty Maids' and the 'Calais' which is all most people seem to know - and that's probably wrong! Review has me more than interested ...
ReplyDeleteI would love to know what you think if you get a chance to read it, Richard. :-)
DeleteThank you for the lovely review, Anna!
ReplyDeleteThank you for introducing me to this complicated woman!
DeleteThank you for this lovely review on this novel dedicated to a tragic and often misunderstood woman. I'd love to go back and give Mary a big hug.
ReplyDeleteWe often see Anne and Elizabeth as heroines, but contemporary accounts of the time don't portray them that way. Look at all the suffering heaped on Mary so that the name of Elizabeth could shine brighter.
In fairness to Anne Boleyn though, the buck stopped with Henry.