ELIZABETH AND MARY: Cousins, Rivals, Queens
Jane Dunn, . . Knopf, $30 (480pp) ISBN 978-0-375-40898-4
This is not so much a dual biography of Elizabeth Tudor and Mary Stuart as a cross-section of the royal cousins' lives as they intersect in fact and in theme. As a successful, ultimately beloved monarch, Elizabeth has been granted the upper hand by history, but here the mirror images of the two queens' experiences suggests how differently their stories could have ended. The opposing trajectories of their lives—Elizabeth rising from a politically and personally precarious childhood to become a powerful ruler and Mary descending from undisputed Scottish heir to prisoner and self-styled martyr for Catholicism—elucidate the problems of early modern queenship more fully than a single biography would. Opening accounts of Elizabeth's coronation and Mary's wedding serve as an emblematic introduction to their experiences of education, religion, family, marriage and leadership. Unfortunately, these accounts are clearly cut from chapter four, where their loss creates a jarring leap. The dual narrative also leads British biographer Dunn (
Reviewed on: 12/08/2003
Genre: Nonfiction
Downloadable Audio - 1 pages - 978-1-4159-5247-4
Hardcover - 535 pages - 978-0-00-257150-0
Open Ebook - 361 pages - 978-0-307-42574-4
Paperback - 480 pages - 978-0-375-70820-6