Enjoyed this book immensely. I had previously read the second book in this trilogy. (But I would not advise reading any series backwards, especially history or historical fiction.)
In this, the first of three books about Emma of Normandy, Emma marries Aethelred, the king of England in order to solidify a relationship between England and Normandy. Emma's brother, Richard, Duke of Normandy gains an alliance with a king who controls a vast area of England; Aethelred gets a promise that Richard will keep the Vikings (somewhat) under control. (Richard already has a pact with the Danes and is related to them through his Danish mother.)
Wow, there is a lot of background to understand, names to learn, places to get accustomed to, but it's all well worth it. And, Bracewell is great at NOT info-dumping. Events, people, places, backstories, when needed, are all included within the storyline itself.(No long tedious passages of who did what to whom fifty years ago, unless it's relevant to what is going on.)
Emma is surprised when her mother arranges this marriage as she has an older sister who should be the next to marry, but Emma has been chosen as she is the stronger sister, both physically and emotionally. She goes to marry the king knowing full well what is expected of her, which the author goes into in detail, nothing is held back. Emma does not enjoy her marriage, her husband, her new life, but she prays and struggles to accept it with her head held high. Aethelred, expecting a submissive wife (like his first, who recently died in childbirth), is surprised to be married to an outspoken and and forthright woman, but apparently the historical Emma was no shrinking violet. When she is tested, she proves herself. She endures a gossipy and back-stabbing royal court which wants little to do with her, enemies who would like nothing better than to see her fail and either be sent home to Normandy or to a convent, and yet slowly Emma wins over enough key and important people who become her eyes and ears when her husband, the king, forces her into the background.
Despite her great dislike of her husband, Emma wants to have his child, to cement the alliance with the two countries. And even though Aethelred already has seven sons (by his first wife), he wants a child with Emma, too, if nothing else but to keep her busy and out of his way. It is this continuing struggle between the two - the king and Emma - which is one of the main focal points of the novel. And this is no romance, one in which Emma ultimately finds the tender man under the hard, coarse soul of the man she married. Not at all. King Aethelred is a beast, a man haunted by the ghost of his brother, as well as a ruthless ruler struggling to keep control of his lands, his nobles, and keep the Vikings - Danes mostly - from constantly pillaging, plundering, murdering, raping - all the things they were known for in this time period.
The time is from around the year 1000 to 1016. According to the author, Emma was between 12 and 20 when she became Aethelred's bride. The main historical figures are real; the main events are real. What the author has imagined or filled in, are the relationships between these people, though there are many historical sources which give hints and clues as to what went on between Emma and her husband, Emma and her Norman court, and others. At the end of the book the author describes where real events - and those which are fictional - meet.
There is a lot of action in this book; depictions of life at the time; attitudes toward women and children; the common people and the nobility; and even what day-to-day life looked like. The conversations are realistic and natural. This is an interesting novel of the Anglo-Saxon period in England, Normandy, and of course, up north where those rascally Vikings dwell. (If only they'd stay up there!)
I look forward to the third and final book in Bracewell's trilogy.