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review 2016-11-28 12:01
Blood Sisters: The Women Behind the Wars of the Roses - Sarah Gristwood

An amazing biography, written in such lively style which makes it as easy to read as a good written high quality novel. I'm writing a review on this book for collage- it is a book that chose. For anyone interesten in english history, especially Cousins War and Tudor dinasty, I roccomend this book. It must have taken a whole lot of research to write this.

Beautiful.

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review 2016-07-31 22:39
Wars of the Roses: Margaret of Anjou - Conn Iggulden
There was something missing from this book. Not the various women sitting at home popping out babies and pining for their men. Plenty of books on the Wars of the Roses feature those women. This book was missing the perspectives from the previous novel. In Stormbird the reader was introduced to various peasants living in the English and French countryside while the French and English armies rampaged around them. I missed those perspectives here. I missed Derry Brewer.

For a book with Margaret of Anjou's name in the title, she sure wasn't a very impressive character. I was expecting a little more depth from the woman called the "She-Wolf of France".

Iggulden's battle scenes are well-written and engaging. For the battle scenes alone I find myself waiting for the next installment.
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review 2016-04-14 18:21
Blood and Roses by Catherine Hokin
Blood and Roses - Catherine Hokin

Striving to make Margaret of Anjou a sympathetic character is a task that few authors have taken on. Conn Iggulden did an admirable job with her younger years in Stormbird, and Susan Higginbotham successfully created a Margaret that the reader understands if not always feels sorry for in Queen of Last Hopes. Catherine Hokin set out in this novel to establish that, while Margaret may not have been a saint, neither were the power players she found herself surrounded by.

Let's face it. It isn't entirely possible to turn Margaret from she-wolf into prim princess, but Hokin demonstrates how her hand was forced. Margaret may not have always responded to events the way she should have, but she was fiercely loyal to a husband who continuously failed her, a son who never reached his potential, and, in her own way, a country that never accepted her. Watching Margaret thrust into a situation that was impossible from the beginning creates a little bit of sympathy for her, even in the heart of the most devoted Yorkist.

Part of what makes the reader appreciate Margaret's position is the more negative portrayal of those she is opposed to. By leaving Edward of March his golden sheen but also exposing some of the ruthlessness and cruelty beneath, one can more easily understand why Margaret continued to fight against him when everyone else accepted his rule.

She is stubborn or devoted, depending on how you look at her. She makes some really bad decisions, regretting some of them and justifying others. She is a mother who would do anything for her child . . . . no matter who his father might be.

On the topic of Prince Edward's paternity, Hokin takes a rather different track than any I've read previously. I won't give anything away, but (whether I agree or not) at least it's unique.

I appreciate the author's goal of propping up the reputation of Margaret of Anjou, a woman who was dealt a losing hand right from the get-go. Still, it is challenging to feel sorry for one who caused so much death and destruction. Even with the York boys given rather nasty personalities in this novel, I couldn't help but wonder how many lives would be saved if Margaret would simply accept her defeat. Of course, eventually she is left with no other choice.

I thank Catherine Hokin for my copy of this novel in return for an honest review.

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review 2015-08-06 00:00
Margaret of Anjou
Margaret of Anjou - Conn Iggulden There was something missing from this book. Not the various women sitting at home popping out babies and pining for their men. Plenty of books on the Wars of the Roses feature those women. This book was missing the perspectives from the previous novel. In [b:Stormbird|17830079|Stormbird (Wars of the Roses, #1)|Conn Iggulden|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1385271736s/17830079.jpg|24944890] the reader was introduced to various peasants living in the English and French countryside while the French and English armies rampaged around them. I missed those perspectives here. I missed Derry Brewer.

For a book with Margaret of Anjou's name in the title, she sure wasn't a very impressive character. I was expecting a little more depth from the woman called the "She-Wolf of France".

Iggulden's battle scenes are well-written and engaging. For the battle scenes alone I find myself waiting for the next installment.
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review 2011-06-28 00:00
History of Margaret of Anjou, Queen of H... History of Margaret of Anjou, Queen of Henry VI of England - Jacob Abbott Yoohoo! Susan - this one is for you and it's free :D
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