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Elizabeth Woodville by David Baldwin
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Elizabeth Woodville (original 2002; edition 2004)

by David Baldwin

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973279,252 (3.58)1
An interesting and convincing account of the life of Elizabeth Woodville, who despite being a much reviled figure of the Wars of the Roses era, does not have a society dedicated to reassessing her life as does Richard III. The alleged rapaciousness of her and her family is simply not supported by the historical evidence. Worth a read, though in places it does rather read like a "life and times" rather than a biography, something the author says in the introduction to the book that he wishes to avoid, but which is more difficult to avoid in the case of most Medieval personages, whose personal lives are very often very or fairly closed books. The only slight downer is the sometimes quite lengthy extracts from contemporary sources which are not translated into more modern English and are quite difficult to read. ( )
  john257hopper | Jan 11, 2008 |
Showing 3 of 3
Two things struck me: this is a seemingly dense book which could have done with more editing from a presentational standpoint - page after page of text with very few paragraphs to break up the action.
Secondly it's not really a standalone book - so much of the action around her is worthy of more effort to describe what was taking place and why.
  xtofersdad | Jul 23, 2019 |
An interesting and convincing account of the life of Elizabeth Woodville, who despite being a much reviled figure of the Wars of the Roses era, does not have a society dedicated to reassessing her life as does Richard III. The alleged rapaciousness of her and her family is simply not supported by the historical evidence. Worth a read, though in places it does rather read like a "life and times" rather than a biography, something the author says in the introduction to the book that he wishes to avoid, but which is more difficult to avoid in the case of most Medieval personages, whose personal lives are very often very or fairly closed books. The only slight downer is the sometimes quite lengthy extracts from contemporary sources which are not translated into more modern English and are quite difficult to read. ( )
  john257hopper | Jan 11, 2008 |
A historical character whose life no novelist would ever have dared to write. A woman whose contemporaries portrayed her as a sorceress, an enchantress, an unprincipled advancer of the family fortunes and as a plucky but pitiful queen in Shakespeare's histories, demands the attention of all who are interested in medieval and royal history.
  antimuzak | Sep 2, 2006 |
Showing 3 of 3

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