Author:Alison Weir
'Weir combines high drama with high passion while involving us in the domestic life of a most remarkable woman in an equally remarkable book' Scotland on Sunday
The first full-length biography of an extraordinary love affair between one of the most important men of English History and a thoroughly modern woman.
Katherine Swynford was first the mistress, and later the wife, of John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster. Her charismatic lover was one of the most powerful princes of the fourteenth century and Katherine was renowned for her beauty and regarded as enigmatic, intriguing and even dangerous by some of her contemporaries.
In this impressive book, Alison Weir has triumphantly rescued Katherine from the footnotes of history, highlighting her key dynastic position within the English monarchy. She was the mother of the Beaufort, then the ancestress of the Yorkist kings, the Tudors, the Stuarts and every other sovereign since - a prodigious legacy that has shaped the history of Britain.
Fast-paced, lively and boldly coloured, Weir's book gives us a vivid portrait of courtly life
—— Sunday TimesWeir combines high drama with high passion while involving us in the domestic life of a most remarkable woman in an equally remarkable book
—— Scotland on SundayGripping...immaculately researched
—— Daily TelegraphHighly enjoyable
—— Literary ReviewWeir's sound scholarship and storyteller's gift for rich, telling detail constantly engages and enthrals the reader
—— The TimesStylish look at two centuries of quarrels and catfights
—— The Sunday TimesEntertaining... An elegantly written, wise and authoritative volume
—— David Stenhouse , Scotland on SundayThis is a timely book. It comes at a moment when British politics is haunted by the intimate enmity of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown and by all its attendant sub-feuds
—— Richard Vinen , The Sunday TimesThis is a most engaging and rewarding book...stylish, scholarly and notably perceptive
—— David Brooks , BBC History MagazineHe [Campbell] captures the determining role of personality in politics and the book is strong on tactics, strategy and, most of all, skulduggery
—— Rohan McWilliam , History Todaya wonderfully, irresistibly compelling read
—— Telegraph...cleverly conceived and stylishly executed...
—— Independent...well worth staying the course... Campbell's dissection of this last union covers much familiar ground, but he shows just how much a close political relationship can hobble an administration as much as energise it
—— Independent on SundayThe book is a joy to read: meticulously researched, beautifully written and scrupulously fair.
—— Chris Mullen , Observerstylish book
—— Sunday TimesEntertaining study
—— Simon Shaw , Daily Mail