Mary Tudor had a very hard life as a child. First she was the object of her father’s, King Henry VIII affection. Then cast out as a illegitimate child with her mother Catherine of Aragon. She went from Princess to Lady and was to be re-trained to accept her new rank and the new religion.
When Henry married Jane, Mary was finally returned to the Castle and reunited with her father but still as a Lady not a princess. Before his death, Henry VIII reinstated Mary as princess and was to be queen in the event that her half brother Edward VI died. Edward carried forth the new religion at the bidding of his counsel and the practice of Catholicism was outlawed, even for Mary.
Mary defied this order however and was threatened by Edwards council. The threats turned out empty and eventually, when the ailing Edward died, she became Queen Mary. She vowed to return England to the old faith.
Today, Queen Mary is often referred to as Bloody Mary because of all the burnings of so called heretics in her land. Julianne Lee wrote this book in an attempt to humanize Mary and show her point of view. She succeeded in this. She brought Mary to life. We got to see how hard her up bring was and her continued devotion to her faith even when her life was threatened for it.
The opening of the story was some modern day children at a slumber party. One of the kids is dared to stare into a mirror and repeat the words “bloody Mary”. This summons Mary and she recalls her life in flashback fashion. Each chapter begins with her narration and the falls into third person narration. This technique worked for me but I didn’t care for the modern day slumber party scene. It made me think of a “B” movie from the 10970’s. LOL!
Julianne Lee also focuses on Mary’s devote religious beliefs which was important to the story but seemed to drag on a bit for me. I got the point, now let’s move on a bit. That said, most of the parts of this novel were first rate. Lee succeeds in bring Queen Mary Tudor to life and gains some of the reader’s sympathy for her.
This is the first book by Julianne Lee that I have read but I am interested in reading more by her.
3.5/5
Thanks to Kaitlyn Kennedy of Penguin Books, USA for a copy of this book.
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The slumber party beginning sounds a bit odd for this type of book. I’ve never read anything about the Tudors so this sounds interesting.
–Anna
Diary of an Eccentric
Wow. Those Tudors sure are popular lately. Thanks for your review of this one.
I am starting to find the Tudors a bit overdone. I wish they would write more about lesser talked about history…
I agree with Kelly. Tudor this, Tudor that! Where are the Stuarts and Hanovers?! I don’t know how I feel about the slumber party thing, either. That’s odd. Great review, though!
Anna, Jessica, Kelly,and Aarti I have read quite a lot about the Tudors but not about Mary, so I found it interesting.
I was really surprised about the Slumber party thing in the beginning.. but by the time I got into the story, I appreciated what the author was trying to do, showing how as time progresses we create a myth about a person that is stretching the truth a bit. The rest of the story I really enjoyed, I am normally completely bored with the way some people write of Mary Tudor, but this one held my interest.
As much as I love the Tudors, I do agree that it sure would be nice to include some other eras of royalty in the myriad of new historical releases coming out.
Thanks for linking my review by the way =)
Aarti;
My previous release, “A Question of Guilt,” is about Mary Stuart. You might like it.
I’ve also written some time travel stories set in other periods. The project I’m working on now is about Jane Grey. Still Tudor, but less well trod ground.
Julianne Lee
And thank you all for the kind words.
Julianne Lee
Marie, Thanks for your point of view on the slumber party. I agree with showing the passage of time. However, if they do make a movie of the book, I hope they don’t go that route. LOL!
Julianne, thanks so much for stopping by. As much as I enjoy the Tudors, I am starting to tire of them. However, I hadn’t read about Mary before. I think I will read A Question of Guilt on of these days. It sounds really good.
Teddy, I just purchased this one the other day and I’m delighted to see that you enjoyed it. I agree that at times I get Tudor-ed out, but I’m still fascinated by them.
I’m not sure I’d like that slumber party part either. Happy New Year!
I am excited to read this one. I just got it in a win from Passages to the Past this week. Nice review.
Tammy, it’s so good to hear from you. I hope all is well with you! I am interested to see what you think of this one.
Beth, Happy New Year!
Toni, I look forward to reading your review of it.
Beautiful book cover! I think the book opening is kind of cool.
Pinned this one.
I wonder if she was really as cold blooded and brutal as they claim. After all, her sister had more people burned at the stake. She suffered from bad health, as well as the divorce of her parents. This must have had a profound effect on her actions.
Amazing how historical figures continue to be written about long after their reign.
I am certainly fascinated by the Tudors and haven’t read much which focused solely on Mary Tudor. I’m interested in reading this one to learn more about her.