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Young Bess, by Margaret Irwin

Carla
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Young Bess, by Margaret Irwin

Post by Carla » Thu March 11th, 2010, 5:43 pm

First published 1944. Edition reviewed: Sourcebooks 2010, ISBN 978-1402229961, uncorrected advance review copy kindly supplied by publisher. 381 pages.

Young Bess is the first in Margaret Irwin’s trilogy of novels about Elizabeth I. It covers the years 1545-1533, when Elizabeth is aged 12-19, and focuses on the scandal surrounding her relationship with Thomas Seymour. All the main characters are historical figures.

Life at the royal court of England in the latter years of the reign of Henry VIII is a risky business. The King, now grossly obese, onto his sixth wife and in failing health, is an unpredictable and bad-tempered tyrant. His younger daughter Elizabeth (Bess) is all too well aware that he killed her mother, Anne Boleyn. A highly intelligent twelve-year-old, she already understands the necessity of learning to navigate the dangerous undercurrents of political intrigue, and the fatal consequences of getting it wrong. She loves her new stepmother, kind Catherine Parr, as a mother, and is delighted to go to live with her after Henry’s death. But soon Catherine marries her old love, the dashing and handsome Thomas (Tom) Seymour, uncle of Bess’s half-brother the child-king Edward. Bess, now fourteen and just entering adolescence, is dangerously attracted to him and he to her. Tom is resentful of his elder brother’s stranglehold on government, and eager to gain a share of power for himself. Whether Tom’s interest in her is due to love, lust, ambition or all three, Bess is about to learn a tragic lesson in the perils of power and love that will shape the rest of her life.

I first read Margaret Irwin’s Elizabeth trilogy many years ago, and it is just as fresh and vivid now as it was then. I am delighted to see it back in print. What draws me back to this trilogy time and again is the outstanding characterisation, not only of Bess but of the other characters as well. Everyone is an individual, with their own hopes, desires and all-too-human failings, portrayed in a way that is sympathetic and yet also clear-eyed. Bess, of course, is the centrepiece. Mercurial and charismatic, clever and yet naïve, still a child in her egotistical vanity but showing signs of the woman she will become, she attracts and exasperates the other characters (and the reader) in equal measure. In his much later biography of Elizabeth, historian David Starkey comments that the Seymour affair was when Elizabeth grew up, and in this masterly novel you can watch it happen.

Tom Seymour blazes across the pages like a comet, handsome, adventurous, courageous and careless, living up to Elizabeth’s famous epithet, “…..a man of much wit and very little judgement.” (Whether she actually said it is immaterial; it sums him up perfectly, at least as he appears here). His eldest brother Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset and Lord Protector, is a bundle of entirely believable contradictions; an idealist who cares about justice for the common people yet thinks nothing of demolishing churches in his desire to amass yet more property, a stern aesthete holding the supreme power of government who is terribly henpecked by his acquisitive wife. King Edward VI attracts sympathy as a frail and lonely boy pushed onto the throne too young – until he demonstrates his share of the Tudor ruthlessness.

Second only to the characterisation is the prose style, which is a delight. Lively, economical and witty, people and events are boldly sketched in a few evocative phrases. On King Henry, “Terrible, jovial, at his nod the greatest heads in the kingdom fell, struck by Jove’s thunderbolt – and then he seemed astonished and annoyed that he was not sufficiently a god to put them on again.” On attitudes to Somerset’s reforms, “Let him try out his fool notions on religion if he must; but property, that was different, that was sacred.” On a noble Scottish lightweight, “He insisted on marriage to either of the Princesses, Elizabeth or Mary (he hadn’t seen either and didn’t mind which) as his price; and was fobbed off instead with the usual promise of Anne of Cleves – a promise that nobody, least of all the lady in question, intended to keep.” On Tom Seymour, “It wasn’t until he had left that Tom remembered the prime motive of his visit, which was to consider his nephew’s kidnapping. Well, that could wait.”

I wonder if Tom’s opinion of Somerset’s German mercenaries might owe at least as much to the circumstances of the 1940s when the book was published than to the 1540s when it is set, and one or two of the characters’ comments about the future, although great fun, are perhaps a little too much of a nod and a wink to the reader (“‘If this goes on,’ said Tom when he heard of it, ‘in another hundred years they will find the King himself guilty of high treason and cut off his head’”). But these nods to the future aside, the overall effect of the novel is of having opened a window onto Tudor England in all its argumentative, colourful, contradictory life. This is a time of rapid social change, as new lands and new knowledge challenge the old certainties and open up both danger and opportunity. Young Bess captures the energy and the sense that anything might happen. No matter how well you know Elizabeth’s story (and I would guess that if you found your way here you probably know it pretty well), the novel manages to make it as exciting and uncertain as it must have been for the characters at the time.

A powerful portrayal of Elizabeth’s teenage years and her relationship with Tom Seymour, told in elegant prose and with superb characterisation.
PATHS OF EXILE - love, war, honour and betrayal in Anglo-Saxon Northumbria
Editor's Choice, Historical Novels Review, August 2009
Now available as e-book on Amazon Kindleand in Kindle, Epub (Nook, Sony Reader), Palm and other formats on Smashwords
Website: http://www.carlanayland.org
Blog: http://carlanayland.blogspot.com

Chatterbox
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Post by Chatterbox » Fri March 12th, 2010, 1:16 am

Great review! I'm so glad that they are reprinting these books. There are two more in the series, Elizabeth, Captive Princess and Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain. I managed to find all three in a single (very fat!) volume.

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Misfit
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Post by Misfit » Fri March 12th, 2010, 2:06 am

[quote=""Chatterbox""]Great review! I'm so glad that they are reprinting these books. There are two more in the series, Elizabeth, Captive Princess and Elizabeth and the Prince of Spain. I managed to find all three in a single (very fat!) volume.[/quote]

I'm sure it's been mentioned elsewhere but Sourcebooks does plan on republishing the entire trilogy. Good for them.
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Amanda
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Post by Amanda » Fri March 12th, 2010, 3:11 am

Now if only they would release the movie on DVD......
I have seen it on TV once, recorded it on video tape...which then got recorded over.

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Misfit
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Post by Misfit » Fri March 12th, 2010, 3:27 am

I've not heard of that but nothing IMHO will ever top the Masterpiece Theatre version with Glenda Jackson as Elizabeth. Awesome.
At home with a good book and the cat...
...is the only place I want to be

Carla
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Post by Carla » Fri March 12th, 2010, 10:55 am

[quote=""Misfit""]I've not heard of that but nothing IMHO will ever top the Masterpiece Theatre version with Glenda Jackson as Elizabeth. Awesome.[/quote]

That's the one I know as the BBC series called Elizabeth R, isn't it? I agree - marvellous.
PATHS OF EXILE - love, war, honour and betrayal in Anglo-Saxon Northumbria
Editor's Choice, Historical Novels Review, August 2009
Now available as e-book on Amazon Kindleand in Kindle, Epub (Nook, Sony Reader), Palm and other formats on Smashwords
Website: http://www.carlanayland.org
Blog: http://carlanayland.blogspot.com

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Jemidar
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Post by Jemidar » Fri March 12th, 2010, 11:02 am

[quote=""Amanda""]Now if only they would release the movie on DVD......
I have seen it on TV once, recorded it on video tape...which then got recorded over.[/quote]

I've been trying to hunt down a copy of the movie too but with no success :( . I really do hope it's released to DVD soon because I remember loving it as a teenager!
Jenny

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Helen_Davis

Post by Helen_Davis » Fri March 12th, 2010, 11:21 am

I'm Tudored out.

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Amanda
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Post by Amanda » Fri March 12th, 2010, 11:40 am


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Jemidar
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Post by Jemidar » Fri March 12th, 2010, 11:49 am

[quote=""Andromeda_Organa""]I'm Tudored out.[/quote]

:eek: Wash you mouth out with soap and water!!!!!! :D

Seriously, some of the Tudor classics should be exempt from such (understandable) statements, and this book is definitely one of them!

I reread Margaret Irwin's trilogy over Christmas and fell in love all over again. Sentimentally, this is the book that started me reading HF as a teenager, but it's lost nothing and charms despite the intervening years of Tudor overkill. As Carla says it's still fresh and vibrant, and nothing like the ones that are routinely churned out now.

And Carla, loved your review :) .
Jenny

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Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

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