The Queen's Sorrow

Author(s): Suzannah Dunn

Fiction

A queen brought low by love compromised and power abused -- the tragedy of Mary Tudor.

General Information

  • : 9780007258284
  • : HarperCollins Publishers
  • : HarperPerennial
  • : 0.205
  • : 05 January 2009
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Suzannah Dunn
  • : Paperback
  • : 5-Sep
  • : 320

More About The Product

Praise for 'The Sixth Wife': 'My, what a story!delightfully vulgar and utterly compelling.' The Times 'Mesmerising and beautifully written.' Scotsman 'Suzannah Dunn!weaves a kind of love story that is both moving and believable. This is the Tudor world as seldom seen!The result is historical chick lit at its most charming.' Daily Telegraph 'Dunn [sheds] possible new light on Katharine's marriage to Thomas Seymour and her final days are treated with sympathy and skill.' Tablet Praise for 'The Queen of Subtleties': 'A stunningly refreshing way of retelling an old story... I really could not put this one down. It brings Anne Boleyn to life as never before, and, probably for the first time ever in fiction, Henry VIII emerges as a truly credible character in an authentic setting.' Alison Weir, author of 'The Six Wives of Henry VIII' 'A remarkable writer, a lyricist of ordinary life and ordinary people transfigured by extreme emotions.' Daily Telegraph 'Her ear for the rhythms of speech is unerring, her feeling for the minutiae of experience acute. It takes a good deal of artistry to create the illusion of real life, and she has managed something more difficult still, which is to show us how strange real life can be.' The Times Praise for 'The Queen of Subtleties': 'Suzannah Dunn is, as ever, a mistress at describing the material world through which her characters move.' Guardian 'A boisterous historical recreation.' Independent '"The Queen of Subtleties" offers a stunningly refreshing way of retelling an old story. I often abandon historical novels nowadays, but I really could not put this one down. It brings Anne Boleyn to life as never before, and, probably for the first time ever in fiction, Henry VIII emerges as a truly credible character in an authentic setting.' Alison Weir, author of 'The Six Wives of Henry VIII'

Suzannah Dunn is the author of eight previous books of fiction:' Darker Days Than Usual, 'Blood Sugar', 'Past Caring', 'Quite Contrary',Venus Flaring', 'Tenterhooks','Commencing Our Descent', and most recently 'Queen of Subtleties'. She lives in Shropshire.