Margaret George The Autobiography of Henry VIII Reviews
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From 2 ratings and 2 reviews
100% of users recommend this product
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2 Reviews For Margaret George The Autobiography of Henry VIII
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Guest 1st Oct 2008
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Good Points: An easy read with just enough spice to make it a page turner and not so much as to make it syrupy. It was a good look into the thinking of Henry VIII. Something that begs for a psychological profile.
General comments: I am wondering if I enjoyed it so much because I had previously read Phllipa Gregory's books of the period. I found myself looking to the next wife and the other side of the story. Since Gregory's books are told from the perspective of the woman involved, this book was a refreshing look at Henry's side of things. He told himself no less or no more lies than the average person but add to that the power he had and we end with a person that on the surface looks like a mad man. I was thrilled that this book took me a week to read and I looked forward to my reading time each day.
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Frostycat
20th Jun 2005
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Margaret George The Autobiography of Henry V111 is strictly speaking a work of fiction, although you would be hard-pressed to find a better or more interesting documentation of the whole of Henry's reign, seen through the eyes of the king himself. The bloodthirsty tyrant of our school history lessons becomes human and fallible, weighed down by self-doubt. Some passages are almost unbearably moving such as when Henry learns of Catherine Howard's (his 'rose without a thorn) adultery or when Kather ...- Read Frostycat's review (241 words)







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