Ratings1
Average rating3
England, late 1547. King Henry VIII Is dead. His fourteen-year-old daughter Elizabeth is living with the king’s widow, Catherine Parr, and her new husband, Thomas Seymour. Seymour is the brother of Henry VIII’s third wife, the late Jane Seymour, who was the mother to the now-ailing boy King.Ambitious and dangerous, Seymour begins and overt flirtation with Elizabeth that ends with Catherine sending her away. When Catherine dies a year later and Seymour is arrested for treason soon after, a scandal explodes. Alone and in dreadful danger, Elizabeth is threatened by supporters of her half-sister, Mary, who wishes to see England return to Catholicism. She is also closely questioned by the king’s regency council due to her place in the line of succession. Was she still a virgin? Was there a child? Had she promised to marry Seymour?Under pressure, Elizabeth shows the shrewdness and spirit she would later be famous for. She survives the scandal, but Thomas Seymour is not so lucky. The “Seymour Scandal” led Elizabeth and her advisers to create of the persona of the Virgin Queen.On hearing of Seymour’s beheading, Elizabeth observed, “This day died a man of much wit, and very little judgment.” His fate remained with her. She would never allow her heart to rule her head again.
Reviews with the most likes.
Through a 21st century lens, Thomas Seymour was a pedophile predator. At the very least he was a creep and a sex pest who assaulted the daughter of a king repeatedly. He groomed her, made his wife complicit in the abuse, and got away with it. The author did amazing work piecing together primary sources to tell this story and the broader story of Seymour's hamfisted attempts to gain power, but the epilogue diminishes that accomplishment. The final pages ignore Seymour's predatory nature and instead sound like a romance novel, lauding a man who refused to take no for an answer, considering his highest accomplishment the fact that he got closer to deflowering Elizabeth I than any other man.