Roses Have Thorns: A Novel of Elizabeth I

Roses Have Thorns: A Novel of Elizabeth I

2013 • 325 pages

Ratings2

Average rating3.5

15

An incredible historical tale. A keeper shelf book. Gorgeous covers that keep the pages turning. Each of these statements is something true in describing this historical Ladies in Waiting series from Sandra Byrd. To Die For was captivating beginning to end in a story of Anne Boleyn's Meg Wyatt. The Secret Keeper was a beautiful story that kept the pages turning of Kateryn Parr's Juliana St. John. Roses Have Thorns is a different and yet enchanting tale that branches the expanse of the sea between Sweden and England to share Elizabeth I's Elin von Snakenborg or Helena's tale. This one was especially enchanting for me as I'm all the way up the line English bred and born (with a bunch of Scotland in me) and I married a man with a heritage of Sweden of which I am not all too familiar.

At first, I was unsure of what I thought of Elin, later Helena. She seemed to be a bit of a pushover in just blindly watching her sister's actions with her fiancé. But then I knew as she was leaving the shore that perhaps her life was meant to take another direction and that her inaction or nonresponse was no so much of being a pushover, but perhaps letting things happen as she didn't really want those circumstances anyhow.

posted: http://creativemadnessmama.com/blog/2013/04/17/roses-have-thorns-a-novel-of-elizabeth-i-by-sandra-byrd/

April 17, 2013Report this review