Set during the tumultuous Wars of the Roses, “Succession” combines
the stories of two Tudor women, royal wives and mothers, two Margarets, both
used
as pawns by powerful marriage brokers, in the intricate game of politics
around the English throne.
The prologue of the novel prefaces much of what is to come,
touching on several of its themes. Margaret Beaufort is remembering a time,
when as a four-year old child, she wandered, lost and terrified, down the long
corridors of the strange house she has been brought to, the home of her new
guardian, the Duke of Suffolk, and meets him by chance for the first time. She already knows it is shameful to cry,
except in penitence, and that she is female and therefore subject to a man’s
control, but what she also remembers is that the Duke spoke to her about the
courage and determination of a woman, the warrior Joan of Arc, whom he greatly admired. She remembers too how the Duke met a terrible
end, condemned as a traitor and savagely beheaded. She herself is a rich heiress and mother to
the future king, Henry VII.
We next meet Margaret of Anjou, the French king’s niece, who
has been brought to England
to marry Henry VI, in a union that should ensure closer links with France , but, as Suffolk
knows, the bride brings no dowry and the match has cost England valuable French territories.
Henry himself has insisted on the match.
He is weak and malleable, and as Margaret soon discovers, he is not inclined to
consummate the marriage. To the earls and power brokers of the English court, a
secure and stable succession is paramount. If Henry has no children, who will
succeed him? The stage is set for
fascinating but terrible power games, in violent times, where torture and death
are commonplace.
This is a complex period in history, handled expertly and
with conviction by Livi Michael who creates an intensely engaging narrative. The
author deals with her subject in an unusual way, by interspersing her fictional
scenes with material from contemporary primary sources: eye witness accounts
and the testimony of medieval chroniclers. Underpinned by meticulous research,
the stories of the two Margarets are vividly brought to life in beautifully
described settings. I should like to thank the author for guiding me kindly
through this complex period of our history.
Pauline Chandler
Return to REVIEWS HOMEPAGE
2 comments:
It sounds absolutely wonderful. Thank you so much for bringing attention to it, Pauline. I shall go and seek it out.
Sounds wonderful - well, both books do! Thanks for this review.
Post a Comment