29th out of 1,340 books
—
111 voters
Wolf Hall (Thomas Cromwell Trilogy #1)
England in the 1520s is a heartbeat from disaster. If the king dies without a male heir, the country could be destroyed by civil war. Henry VIII wants to annul his marriage of twenty years and marry Anne Boleyn. The pope and most of Europe opposes him. Into this impasse steps Thomas Cromwell: a wholly original man, a charmer and a bully, both idealist and opportunist, astu...more
ebook, 560 pages
Published
October 13th 2009
by Henry Holt and Co.
(first published 2009)
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Aug 16, 2011
~Geektastic~
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
anyone interested in English history
I have always been fascinated by the history of England under the Tudors, particularly Henry VIII. I chalk this up partly to a morbid fascination, and partly to a genuine desire to understand the circumstances leading up to the Golden Age of Elizabeth I. (Her family’s Whig hatred of Elizabeth I is one of the few things I hold against Jane Austen.) This being said, I have hidden plot spoilers, but I will not be held accountable for the “spoilers” of history.
Well, to understand the circumstances...more
Well, to understand the circumstances...more
May 19, 2011
Emily O
rated it
2 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Emily by:
Booker Prize Winner
Do you ever wonder about why people choose to read the books they do? Well, I can tell you, I read Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel because it won the Book Prize For Fiction in 2009. You see, The Children's Book by A.S. Byatt was nominated for the Booker in 2009, but did not win. Curious to see what book could beat one of my favorite books of all time, I looked up Wolf Hall. And what do you know, it's another piece of historical fiction set in England and written by a woman. This could be interesting!...more
Mar 22, 2010
karen
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
it-is-for-class,
littry-fiction
hilary mantel is such a tease. she calls her book wolf hall because she knows i have a crush on jane seymour, and then she just blah blah blahs about thomas cromwell for 500 pages, feeding me only tiny bites of jane. sigh. me and hil have always had a rocky history.i have read four of her books now, and have only really liked one; beyond black. but i keep trying. this one was for class, but i probably would have read it anyway, because this summer i read a nice fat bio of henry VIII and really e...more
Putting this book onto my history shelf stuck rather in my throat. It is a brilliant story, wonderfully descriptive and emotive. It creates a great panoply of historical figures but falls far short of actually being just to them. By that i mean Mantel quite clearly sets out to unwrite the hagiographical picture catholic tradition has given to Thomas More. She points out, quite rightly, his brutal treatment of 'heretics' and his lack of compassion to those with whom he disagrees and seems even to...more
Have you ever been with a group of people when someone tells a joke and the rest of the group thinks it's hilarious but you just don't get it? Wolf Hall was that way for me. So many people think it's brilliant while I couldn't maintain enough interest to finish it.
I love historical fiction, especially from this time period, so I expected to really like this one. I thought that telling the story of Henry VIII from the viewpoint of Cromwell was an interesting twist and I looked forward to learning...more
I love historical fiction, especially from this time period, so I expected to really like this one. I thought that telling the story of Henry VIII from the viewpoint of Cromwell was an interesting twist and I looked forward to learning...more
I treat this novel as a qualified failure of an experiment (qualified since I am open to the possibility that the failure was mine) and I sincerely wish that Mantel does not win the Booker this year - I just cannot bring myself to spend anymore time with her lifeless narrator.
More than anything else Wolf Hall seemed to me to be a literary experiment - on how closely a woman can get into a man's mind, and as far as I am concerned, a qualified failure. I could never truly feel that the narration w...more
Aug 05, 2012
Jennifer (aka EM)
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Jennifer (aka EM) by:
Simon
Shelves:
for-the-desert-island
First off, I find the whole notion of the monarchy - any monarchy - absurd. And also, despite being a citizen of a Commonwealth nation with Her Royal Majesty's mug plastered all over my bills and coins, the Union Jack incorporated into my provincial flag, and a mom who dragged me out of bed at 4 a.m. to watch Lady Diana, Princess of Wales walk to her doom - err, groom - I am not, nor have I ever been, a monarchist.
I honestly don't remember what kind of history I was taught in school, but the Roy...more
I honestly don't remember what kind of history I was taught in school, but the Roy...more
I'm not big on historical fiction, and have read nearly nothing on the Tudors, but it is fitting to me that here on the anniversary of the death of Queen Elizabeth (the virgin one), I gnawed Wolf Hall to the bone.
It occurs to me that the Elvis Costello song "(I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea" could be disdain for Thomas More? The song popped into my head when Cromwell visits More in Chelsea. More always seemed to be in a bad mood, in addition to having a stick up his bum - in the book, I mean. As...more
It occurs to me that the Elvis Costello song "(I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea" could be disdain for Thomas More? The song popped into my head when Cromwell visits More in Chelsea. More always seemed to be in a bad mood, in addition to having a stick up his bum - in the book, I mean. As...more
Jan 19, 2013
Sue
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
lovers of historical fiction
Recommended to Sue by:
so, so many
Here it is mid January and I already have one of, if not the favorite book of 2013 already. Mantel has brought not just Cromwell to life, she has enlivened an era, a people, a country a king. And done it with prose that is a joy to read.
So much has been written about this book already that my plan is to choose some favorite sections as reflections of Mantel's course in the whole.
"There is a chill in the air; the summer birds have flown,
and black-winged lawyers are gathering for the new term i...more
So much has been written about this book already that my plan is to choose some favorite sections as reflections of Mantel's course in the whole.
"There is a chill in the air; the summer birds have flown,
and black-winged lawyers are gathering for the new term i...more
For the first 100 pages I was like a Monkees song, you know the one -
[Cue cute organ/guitar intro]
I thought great historical novels about the 16th century were only true in fairy tales
Meant for someone else but not for me
Mmm, historical novelists were out to get me
That's the way it seemed
Disappointment haunted all my dreams
Then I read Wolf Hall ! Now I'm a believer!
Not a trace of doubt in my mind!
Ooh I'm in love!
Ooh Hilary Mantel I couldn’t leave you if I tried

But then some strange things began...more
[Cue cute organ/guitar intro]
I thought great historical novels about the 16th century were only true in fairy tales
Meant for someone else but not for me
Mmm, historical novelists were out to get me
That's the way it seemed
Disappointment haunted all my dreams
Then I read Wolf Hall ! Now I'm a believer!
Not a trace of doubt in my mind!
Ooh I'm in love!
Ooh Hilary Mantel I couldn’t leave you if I tried

But then some strange things began...more
Jan 13, 2013
Emma
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
history,
historical-fiction
I love Tudor history and luckily for me there is an (almost) infinite variety of novels, biographies, films, plays and TV shows with which to indulge myself. There is no such thing as a definitively accurate historical account - it is the conflicting opinions and contrasting interpretations that fascinate me.
Henry V111's struggle for supremacy, his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and the rise of Anne Boleyn in particular is a fascinating and exhilarating part of history and Wolf Hall thrusts us...more
Henry V111's struggle for supremacy, his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and the rise of Anne Boleyn in particular is a fascinating and exhilarating part of history and Wolf Hall thrusts us...more
What to rate this book? That is the question. Whether to give 4 or 5 stars and to suffer the consequences of Anne's outrageous temper.
I am going with 5. Despite that there was the confusing of use of pronouns that everyone else has already mentioned, despite that it seemed to take me forever to read I found myself hanging on to every plot thread, every conversation, every subtelty (that I could pick up on). This was so uniquely written that it almost felt like a different reading experience. Mu...more
I am going with 5. Despite that there was the confusing of use of pronouns that everyone else has already mentioned, despite that it seemed to take me forever to read I found myself hanging on to every plot thread, every conversation, every subtelty (that I could pick up on). This was so uniquely written that it almost felt like a different reading experience. Mu...more
One of the most interesting things about history is thinking about perspective. Very few people lived their lives with an intention of being known as a villain of history. Yet I think all of us fall into the trap of thinking of the past in moralistic terms sometimes. This is a function of generations of storytelling and cultural indoctrination. There are facts that we don't ever necessarily learn, or at least can remember learning, that we don't pause to consider.
My favorite thing about Wolf Hal...more
My favorite thing about Wolf Hal...more
Dec 01, 2010
Emily
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2009,
literary-fiction-i-actually-like
Wolf Hall is the kind of book that gets better the more you think about it. Its protagonist is Thomas Cromwell: a villain in A Man for All Seasons but here a man with a family, a career, and a sharp way of thinking. He doesn't want to be a saint; he wants to apply his shrewdness and hard-won experience to make the best of a bad world. His feelings towards his family, as portrayed here, make him sympathetic, even likeable.
The book introduces all the figures familiar to readers of other Tudor stor...more
The book introduces all the figures familiar to readers of other Tudor stor...more
Mantel has given a wonderful voice to Thomas Cromwell in this novel of an eyewitness perspective on Henry VIII's split from the Church of Rome. All the usual suspects are present, Katherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Cardinal Wolsey, Thomas More, along with a wonderful supporting cast of fully realized minor characters, whether fictional or historical. I don't know which is more painful to watch, Thomas More being viciously abusive to his wife and daughters over lunch, or Cromwell as a child watchi...more
Expectations can be tricky things: sometimes the actual experience of reading a novel, while perfectly fine, doesn't live up to one's preconceptions in some way, while on the other hand, negative buzz around a title can delay a wonderful read for years. So it's a kind of a cool change of pace to find, for once, pretty much exactly the reading experience I had envisioned in cracking open Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall. I was bargaining on a lush, character-driven treatment of Thomas Cromwell and the b...more
Apr 17, 2010
Clif Hostetler
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
historical-fiction
This historical novel elevates Thomas Cromwell, adviser to Henry VIII, from villainhood (as portrayed in “A Man For All Seasons”) to sympathetic character. It also pulls Thomas Moore’s reputation down from its saintly perch. Moore in this story is a sniveling sanctimonious character running his own inquisition searching for heretics (utilizing torture and burning at the stake). Cromwell on the other hand is portrayed as the consummate administrator, accountant and politician astute at reading pe...more
Told through the eyes of Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall is a wonderful take on Tudor history. Hilary Mantel sets out to write a fictionalised biography of the rise to power of Cromwell, as well as the fall of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, Henry VIII’s desire to divorce and the opposition of Thomas More. Mantel puts her take on the characterisation of these historical figures and went to painstaking lengths to make sure her version of the story lines up with the historical events as accurately as possible....more
Like many others, I thought this book was utterly brilliant. The pleasure of reading it was palpable, a tingling in my fingers. That kind of pleasure put me in mind of another book that provoked it, Yehoshua’s A Journey to the End of the Millenium, but I thought to myself, those books are nothing like each other. Then I realized that in terms of subject matter, they are not so dissimilar after all. Both revolve largely around the search for clarification of religious marriage law, in the service...more
Thos. Cromwell has usually been presented as the heavy in the middle part of Henry VIII's reign--- the grasping, amoral, bullying parvenu who destroyed Sir Thos. More, the mastermind behind the king's efforts to divorce himself from Katherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn, the man behind the plundering of the monasteries. Leo McKern did a brilliant turn as Cromwell in "A Man for All Seasons" and Donald Pleasance played him in "Henry VIII and His Six Wives". The recent "Tudors" mini-series did...more
Feb 18, 2010
Teresa
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Teresa by:
Lisa Hill
The thing to remember when starting this book is that 99% percent of the time the pronoun 'he' refers to Cromwell, even at times when the sentence structure makes it seems like 'he' would be someone else. It took me a short while to realize this, but once I did, I was fine. You are in Cromwell's head; you see everything from his perspective. As he reacts to others' reactions of him (many times, he is bemused to see how he is thought of) another layer of characterization is added.
This novel is be...more
This novel is be...more
Set in one of history's most fascinating periods, this slow epic is based on the life of Henry VIII's villainous 2IC and hatchet man, Thomas Cromwell, best known as the principal adversary to 'England's martyr' Sir Thomas More in the famous Robert Bolt play A Man For All Seasons (the film providing Leo McKern, as Cromwell, with one of his early successes). Cromwell's oily dastardry also laced the famous BBC television series of the 70s, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, and because I know both these...more
First off I'd like to say without the least reservation that Ms Mantel thoroughly deserves all the accolades she has garnered for this novel - and there have been some. She herself describes the process of writing it in terms of a sustained hallucination, as if she were in a film, occupying the same space as the main protagonist, with a ghostly overlap, watching the action unfold through the lens of his eyes. She describes her exhilaration once she got started, and I can well imagine that, it mi...more
I love finishing a good book and enjoying the moment immediately afterward, just sitting and thinking about what I've read. Wolf Hall was the first book in quite a while to leave me in that moment of quiet contemplation, not eager to pick up the next book and let what I have just read fade away.
I was pretty sure, based on the topic and reviews, that I would love Wolf Hall. Well written historical fiction about the Tudors? Of course I would love that. Well written historical fiction about the Tud...more
I was pretty sure, based on the topic and reviews, that I would love Wolf Hall. Well written historical fiction about the Tudors? Of course I would love that. Well written historical fiction about the Tud...more
The story of Thomas Cromwell, who rose from poverty to become one of Henry VIII's most trusted advisers. Most accounts treat Cromwell as a ruthless, conniving bastard, but this book doesn't allow for such an easy judgment. Cromwell is many things: scheming but loyal, clear-eyed and seemingly cold in matters of business but tender towards his family, friends and household, like a medieval Godfather.
The characterization is fascinating, not just of Cromwell, but of Henry and the various members of...more
The characterization is fascinating, not just of Cromwell, but of Henry and the various members of...more
May 09, 2011
Karla (Mossy Love Grotto)
rated it
1 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
historical-fiction
I just couldn't get into it. Literary fiction that disregards common pronunciation and pronouns for no good reason does not make for a pleasant read for me. I wanted to recommend that Mantel ice down after those ungodly stretches at litracha. I'd rather read a biography on the man than muddle through this.
Along with the execrable The Religion, this book is one more reason to ignore the award panels.
Along with the execrable The Religion, this book is one more reason to ignore the award panels.
The King’s Fixer
I wrote the following brief evaluation of Hilary Mantel’s historical novel Wolf Hall a couple of years ago for another site. It was before I joined GoodReads. I’m now adding it here because I’ve just ordered Bring up the Bodies, the sequel, which I will read and review just as fast as I am able. Keep watching!
When it comes to fiction there are two things I tend to avoid: historical novels and almost anything on the Man-Booker list.
I have read some good historical novels, and I...more
I wrote the following brief evaluation of Hilary Mantel’s historical novel Wolf Hall a couple of years ago for another site. It was before I joined GoodReads. I’m now adding it here because I’ve just ordered Bring up the Bodies, the sequel, which I will read and review just as fast as I am able. Keep watching!
When it comes to fiction there are two things I tend to avoid: historical novels and almost anything on the Man-Booker list.
I have read some good historical novels, and I...more
So I am listening to this audiobook (easily one of the best audio productions I've ever heard, by the way, up there with Jeremy Irons reading Lolita!) and I am only about an hour and a half into the book, and already I can tell this is a five-star book.
OH. MY GOD, YOU GUYS. THE PROSE. It is so expert, so tight, so well crafted! I am freaking out! When I first began to listen, I had that gobsmacked moment that all writers get from time to time when, confronted by the work of a true master artist,...more
OH. MY GOD, YOU GUYS. THE PROSE. It is so expert, so tight, so well crafted! I am freaking out! When I first began to listen, I had that gobsmacked moment that all writers get from time to time when, confronted by the work of a true master artist,...more
Oct 31, 2012
Sera
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Sera by:
European Royalty
Shelves:
historical-fiction,
own
I found the writing style at the beginning part of the book to be clunky (and it wasn't the use of "he" either). However, once I became used to it, the story really took off for me. Like the Romanovs, I also find the Tudors to be a fascinating group of people, and frankly, I never get tired of reading about Henry VIII.
I really enjoyed having the story told from the perspective of Thomas Cromwell. Is he overly ambitious as history has portrayed him? Or is it just doing his job, which is he very g...more
I really enjoyed having the story told from the perspective of Thomas Cromwell. Is he overly ambitious as history has portrayed him? Or is it just doing his job, which is he very g...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| to finish or not to finish | 48 | 303 | Jun 17, 2013 05:41am | |
| The title Wolf Hall | 5 | 65 | Jun 09, 2013 06:05pm | |
| The Book Vipers: Wolf Hall | 64 | 49 | Jun 05, 2013 01:09am | |
| 2013 Reading Chal...: Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel | 29 | 57 | May 23, 2013 03:32pm | |
| Is it just me... | 46 | 483 | May 23, 2013 11:56am |
Hilary Mary Mantel, née Thompson was born in Glossop, Derbyshire, England on 6 July 1952. She studied Law at the London School of Economics and Sheffield University. She was employed as a social worker, and lived in Botswana for five years, followed by four years in Saudi Arabia, before returning to Britain in the mid-1980s. In 1987 she was awarded the Shiva Naipaul Memorial Prize for an article a...more
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Mar 23, 2013 11:55pm
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