History may be one darned thing after another, and in the scope of the 20-something years covered in this novel, lots of darned things and motives abound - the depiction of sons being very different from their fathers (Louis Capet and his son Philippe, for example), of women suspended waiting for news (Eleanor and Constance of Brittany), of mistrust (Henry II and his devil's brood). It is the stuff of history, but above all, a family saga - a family that played its tensions and successes over a huge area of mainland Europe and the kingdom by the sea.
3 comments:
A friend gave me 'When Christ and his Saints slept' a while ago, it is by Penman I'm sure, I really will have to TRY and read it , it's enormous!
That's a good one, I really liked King Stephen, weird though that sounds
Penman is the ULTIMATE! I've loved ALL of her books!
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