Saturday, 11 January 2014

Bring up the Bodies - the fall of Anne Boleyn

Hoorah for the first completed book of 2014. Bring up the Bodies, by Hilary Mantel, continues the story of Thomas Cromwell in the court of King Henry VIII ... and boy was it worth the wait! I read Wolf Hall a couple of years ago on audio (it was the first audio book I purchased) and absolutely loved it. When I heard there was a sequel, and that it was just as good (winning the Man Booker Prize just like its predecessor) I couldn't wait to get it on my ipod and immerse myself in the intrigues of the Tudor era where everyone is at the mercy of the whims and desires of the monarch! The action starts with Henry starting to pay attention to the quiet, plain Jane Seymour. His wife, Anne Boleyn, is claiming to be pregnant and trying to reassure the King that THIS time, it WILL be a son ... however, Henry's love for Anne has diminished and he is starting to murmur that their marriage may not be valid and therefore has been cursed, and that it will never produce the male heir he is so desperate for. Thomas Cromwell, the "fixer" for the King starts to see the writing on the wall, but, as always hedges his bets for a while and tries to keep things on an even keel. When the exiled Katherine of Aragon dies and Anne loses the baby, Henry's mind is made up and he tasks Cromwell with clearing the path for him to take Jane Seymour as his new wife ... and so the betrayals and intrigues begin and we all know where they end up. This is such a great book, one that I found hard to put down, and looked for excuses to get my ipod back on at every opportunity. I cannot recommend this book highly enough ... and I can't wait for the third book in the trilogy.

My STAR rating: FIVE (did you ever doubt it).

Length: 436 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; abridged audio CD; multimedia CD.

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