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The Beheading Game: A Novel

Not yet published
Expected 24 Mar 26
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Disgraced. Beheaded. And out for revenge . . .

We all know what happened to Henry VIII’s second wife, Anne Boleyn. But what if she woke up the day after her execution and took it upon herself to seek justice?

“Fabulous! A marvelously inventive and mythic reworking of the story of Anne Boleyn. I loved it.”—Kelly Link, author of The Book of Love


“Nobody was surprised at Anne’s conviction. The world loves to put a woman in her place.”


The Beheading Game begins in the hours after Anne Boleyn’s beheading, when she wakes to find herself unceremoniously laid to rest in a makeshift coffin, her head wrapped in linen at her knees. Discarded by King Henry VIII for being unable to give him a male heir and reviled by Cromwell for being too smart for her own good, she was ultimately executed based on trumped-up charges of adultery, incest, and high treason.

Anne escapes the Tower of London, sews her head back on, then sets out on a quest to kill Henry VIII before he can marry her own lady-in-waiting Jane Seymour. The stakes are high—if Jane gives birth to a rival heir, Anne’s daughter, Elizabeth, will lose her claim to the throne. Traveling the streets of London in the guise of a commoner, with the help of a prostitute who becomes a trusted friend (and perhaps something more), Anne soon realizes how little she knew about life in the real world.

A fantastical journey through the wilds of England and Tudor history, filled with danger and magic and steeped in Arthurian legend, The Beheading Game is a prescient reminder that “mouthy” women have always been punished. Now, thanks to debut novelist Rebecca Lehmann, nearly five hundred years after Anne Boleyn’s death, one of history’s most maligned women finally has the chance to tell her story.

307 pages, Kindle Edition

Expected publication March 24, 2026

10436 people want to read

About the author

Rebecca Lehmann

9 books44 followers
Rebecca Lehmann is an award-winning poet and essayist. She has an MFA in poetry from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she was a Maytag Fellow. She is the author of three collections of poetry: Between the Crackups; Ringer, winner of the AWP Donald Hall Prize (selected by Ross Gay); and The Sweating Sickness. Her writing has appeared in American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, NPR’s The Slowdown, and the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day. She lives in Indiana with her family, where she is an associate professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies at Saint Mary’s College. The Beheading Game is her debut novel.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 181 reviews
Profile Image for Hades ( Disney's version ).
263 reviews69 followers
November 2, 2025
Thank you Netgalley and Crown Publishing for an ARC of this book!!


This was another absolutely phenomenal read for me. It had me hooked from the first page and I couldn't put it down. As I've mentioned in the past, having ADD sometimes makes things you genuinely love feel like the world's biggest bore & chore. I adore history, but you'd never know it. It's just one of those things I can only pay attention to, if I'm intrigued in the right ways. I love to learn, but it has to be fun/ entertaining in some way. This checked every single box for me. 


I really enjoyed the character development of Anne throughout this. 


I adored the unexpected love interest


I LOVED the seamless blend of history with original story telling 


The peppered in humourous one liners were superb !


I really hope this is far from the last book we get like this from Rebecca Lehmann!!



Until next time,
Hades
🩵
Profile Image for Roman Clodia.
2,932 reviews4,791 followers
November 25, 2025
It's unfortunate that this is being published at around the same time as the title story in Senaa Ahmad's The Age of Calamities as that also deals with an Anne Boleyn who comes back from the dead but, as a short story, has both a sharper attitude and plotline as well as moving more briskly. The Beheading Game felt stretched to me, as if it too had material for a short story but as a novel lacked depth and flounders a little finding narrative direction. The beginning introduces a secondary character who simply disappears and then Anne Boleyn moves to the court, almost like a whole different story. It's also a bit hard, I'd say, to be competing with Wolf Hall and the huge number of Tudor books, both fiction and non-fiction, which have done this episode from every angle we can think of.

While the story of Anne coming back to life to take revenge is innovative (even if belated to Ahmad), the characterisation needs of a novel are not the same as a short story: this Anne, Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell all feel rather flat and one-note, not a great comparison after the superlative Wolf Hall trilogy.

It's always interesting to see a take which disrupts an existing narrative in the way this does but it just feels like the book doesn't have enough material or perspective to add much-needed depth to a novel of this length. It especially feels like a mis-step to have Anne forcing Cromwell to support Elizabeth to the throne given that we know she becomes queen after Cromwell's own death so is hardly dependent on him.

Nice idea but I wanted far more to support the core idea and give in weight and significance: 2.5 stars.

Thanks to Vintage for an ARC via NetGalley
Profile Image for Sasha.
594 reviews56 followers
August 22, 2025
What a brilliant historical fiction! I LOVE Anne Boleyn so I was screaming when I got this ARC! Thank you NetGalley and Crown Publishing!

This book looks at an alternate history, where Anne somehow survives her execution and comes back with a vengeance and a purpose - to expose of her ex-husband Henry VIII and get her daughter Elizabeth on the throne.

This book is perfect for fans of Anne Boleyn and Tudor history. We get insights into Anne’s memories and her feelings and it’s cool to see what happens when she makes her way to the royal residence where the King resides - Whitehall and the chaos that ensues.

Honestly I love reading books where Anne lives after all and history is rewritten… and this was super fun, and the ending was kind of nice.. an ending Anne herself probably would have approved of. I won’t ruin it though, you must read it for yourself!
Profile Image for Dan Bassett.
495 reviews101 followers
November 13, 2025
A gorgeously detailed and vulnerable analysis of Anne’s time as Queen and the fallout of her death where people were so quick to gossip, presume, and ultimately condemn a figure they knew next to nothing about.
Anne suffered as Henry’s latest trophy, his conquest, his disgrace: how dare she birth only a daughter, and shun him by miscarriage via his sons. How dare she have free thought and live amongst her friends and family.
Does she not know how she shames him so?
The answer is simple; he must be rid of her.
However, Anne awakens inside an arrow chest with her head beside her and it is here her tale begins of treachery, betrayal, forbidden love, and ultimately revenge….
Do not miss this amazing book!!! I was transfixed!!!
Profile Image for Josh.
74 reviews3 followers
Read
September 28, 2025
This is really fierce.

An ingenious historical retelling of the execution of Anne Boleyn that seamlessly blends horror with the fantastical. Armed with a needle, thread, and a head freshly sewn back on, the reader is treated to a feminist Medieval reckoning of epic proportions. Smart insights, lovely prose, a fairytale-like plot, and sweet, sweet revenge make this novel something you do not want to miss.
Profile Image for Emily Garmon.
270 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 21, 2026
4⭐️

The Beheading Game posits a world in which Queen Anne Boleyn, the ill-fated 2nd wife of King Henry VIII, survives her execution. Anne wakes in her own coffin (the infamous arrow wood coffin, cheaply made) to find her arms holding her own head. Using remarkable strength and tenacity, Anne gets herself out of her own tomb and alights through London. Using a stolen needle and thread, she sews her own head back on. Despite the supernatural circumstances of her undeath, she sets herself on the path of revenge: kill Henry no matter what it takes. Upon chance she meets a commoner named Alice, a woman who travels into the city to do prostitution when money is tight. Alice helps her secure lodging and agrees to go to the Tower of London with her. Although suspcious of Anne's impromptu explanations for how she's come to be finely dressed and yet lacking money, Alice takes her under her wing. With Alice's help, Anne makes the fantasical, dangerous journey from London to the countryside to secure the king's death, and her daughter Elizabeth's rightful place on the throne.

My thoughts:
Wow. Just wow. A beautiful homage to the famous, maligned Queen Anne Boleyn. Lehmann knows Anne inside and out. Not only does she give actual factual details of Anne's real life woven throughout this narrative of her undeath, but let's Anne remembrances (which give enough emotion to feel factual) drive the story forward. As somone who has read countless novels and non-fiction about Anne Boleyn and Tudor history, I devoured this. I found myself crying at moments that as an amateur Tudor historian I've read numerous times. Lehmann gives this novel so much depth. I also think that people who have never read a novel about Anne Boleyn will find this a fascinating read. And if, like me, you have read many Tudor works, you will also find this insightful.

Thank you to NetGalley, the publisher and author for an advanced reader's copy to review. My opinion is my own.
Profile Image for Heather B.
154 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 10, 2026
A unique book! I found the Tudor period fascinating when learning about it at school, so of course I wanted to read a book about Anne Boleyn surviving her own beheading, and then her quest for revenge against Henry VIII!

What I loved about it: It starts with an absolute banger of a first chapter. Anne is an interesting character to get to know - She's strong headed, assertive, and her relationship with Alice was one of the highlights for me.

The deviations from the story when Anne was reminiscing about her old life were some of my favourite parts. A beautiful mixture of true history and the author's imagination. The author has clearly done her research, which added much depth to the tale.

The second half lost its momentum slightly, with a little too much hiding and running and less plot development than the first half. However, if you're a fan of historical fiction, the Tudors and want both of those those with a little sprinkle of magic, give it a go. I'll be thinking and talking about this book for a long time.

Thank you Random House UK, Vintage for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. This is my honest and unbiased review.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
767 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 26, 2026
It's crazy how little bloodshed there was in this book, with it being named The Beheading Game. I absolutely love the idea of Anne Boleyn coming back to life, sewing her back on and deciding to kill Henry before he can kill any other wives (only in fiction, though. Not in real life, obviously). I think my absolute favorite scene in the entire book is the conversation she has with Cromwell.

Definitely would recommend this book!

Thanks so much to NetGalley for the free Kindle book. My review is voluntarily given, and my opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Cori Samuel.
Author 62 books59 followers
December 6, 2025
I was agog to read this, the concept of an executed Anne Boleyn sewing her own head back on and going all out for revenge is truly fantastic.

Unfortunately, the vengeance wasn't anything like as sharp as I wanted, and the majority of this book is experiencing everyday life in Tudor England. If you're interested in that insight, as well as a reimagining of Anne's past via flashbacks, then this may work really well for you -- it is lovingly done and very readable.

I personally wanted more from either the revenge theme, or the resurrection aspect. I wouldn't put this under Alternate History either, because the story doesn't cover any significant impact from the historical divergence created, a core feature of alt histories in general.

All in all, a lovely story, just not what I'd hoped for based on the blurb / beginning.


This review is based upon a complimentary advance reading copy provided by the publisher.
Profile Image for Peejay(Pamela).
1,009 reviews14 followers
December 14, 2025
What a fascinating mix of historical facts and fantasy! I really enjoyed the story: it kept me captivated from beginning to end. What if Anne Boleyn somehow came back after her execution seeking revenge? Seeking to protect her child Elizabeth? Well written and captivating. 4.5 stars. Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the advance readers copy.
Profile Image for nyna.
25 reviews4 followers
September 25, 2025
I would consider myself largely a historical layman. Time periods and eras are hard to discern, blurring together, details lost—and yet, I quite enjoyed The Beheading Game. There is always a mild aversion to historical fiction reading like a textbook, weighted down by its dense factual components, but this book did not suffer from this at all; it was still able to recount various events and interpersonal connections without being stuffy. Written with poise, Rebecca Lehmann pens a fresh, exciting take on one of the most disparaged women in history.

Second wife to King Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn has been falsely accused and publicly executed, her decapitated head stowed away not in a coffin, but an arrow chest, alongside her body. Rising from the dead, and thoroughly scorned, Anne clambers out of her entrapment, sews her head back onto her neck, and embarks on a journey for revenge. With aid from a street-smart prostitute, the motley pair make their way along.

The narrative follows an ambling, almost stream-of-consciousness style, seamlessly drifting between Anne’s memories and the present. Still, it was surprisingly suspenseful, almost taut at some parts, compelling readers to turn to the next page, and the next, and the next. I loved the magical realism elements, some portions of the novel kept you wondering what was real and what was not. Though fantastical, there were nevertheless profound meditations on gender and sexuality, nobility and class, friendship and motherhood.

Recommended to historical fiction fans, proponents of female rage, and those who simply enjoy a well-rounded, satisfying revenge story.

Thank you to NetGalley and Crown Publishing for the opportunity to read this book.
Profile Image for Danielle | daniellereadslikealot .
752 reviews41 followers
March 2, 2026
Anne Boleyn is forever a fascination of mine and books about her are always favorites. The Beheading Game is no exception. I LOVED this portrayal of Anne so much. She was fiery, a little haughty, crazy smart and so resourceful. I liked that she got to really see how the common people lived and check her privilege a bit. Seeing her humble herself while still retaining all that makes her Anne Boleyn, Queen of England was such a beautiful character journey. I loved seeing how much she loved her daughter, Elizabeth. That’s always been one of my favorite things about Anne and it was done so beautifully here. It is an alternative history and I LOVED the ending Lehmann wrote so much. I think most of us fans of the Six Queens will enjoy it (without giving too much away!) Any historical fiction fan who also enjoys a little bit of fantasy and strong female characters would love this one!

Thank you to Crown Publishing for the digital reader’s copy!
Profile Image for Lexi Rose Reads.
129 reviews34 followers
November 15, 2025
Thank you to Crown and Netgalley for this e-arc.

I think it's well known that King Henry VIII had numerous wives, and it is well known that Anne Boleyn was his second wife. The basic premise of her story is well known. She was beheaded for supposed treason. But this has a unique twist on Anne's story. You see, Anne didn't quite die.

I'm a huge history nerd, and the Tudor dynasty has always been a bit of a hyperfixation for me. I love historical fiction. So this really was right up my alley. I like the fantasy element of it. Of Anne still being alive after her beheading. Of her being able to try to enact her revenge on Henry. I enjoyed the travels through the first half of the book. I liked the relationship Anne had with Alice in the beginning. The general mistrust. I can see that people didn't recognize Anne immediately. After all, how many people really got to look at their queen up close and personal?

But this book started to lose me mid-way through. Anne and Alice escape to the Fens. Which is okay, I'm on board yet. They need to recoup and strategize. Except almost immediately, Anne turns back for London, where they just came from? And we pretty much say goodbye to Alice at this point which honestly just felt odd with how much of a supporting character she was up to that point. But okay I can look past this.

It's the ending for me. I'm sorry. It just didn't make sense. She got her revenge all right. But it kept being brought up that Anne was burning hot and then . . . she turns into a bird? I literally just sat here and stared at the page for a minute. I'm open to a lot of random stuff. I don't care if a book includes people shifting into animals. It was weird for it to be brought up in the end of the book. It felt lazy in a way to end the story that way. It just isn't setting right with me.
1,135 reviews46 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 8, 2026
Thanks to NetGalley and Harvill for the advanced copy of this title in return for an honest review.

I am obsessed with the Henry VIII and his Six Wives story, and I love reading anything new about them, so this book certainly piqued my interest.

I was concerned beforehand about how she was going to write the scene of Anne's resurrection without making it sound juvenile or whimsical. But the opening chapter is perfection. Not always pleasant - but the poor woman has just been decapitated so we'll let her off if she's not looking her best - but it was gruesome and with the right amount of gravitas, and yet it felt very real, like "of course she's going to wake p and put her head back on".

It is so inventive, so passionate and detailed and respectful to the history and truth of Anne's story - even if it is now believed that she was innocent of the crimes she was killed for.

Anne Boleyn is not always particularly likeable in this. I understand she's been killed and resurrected and so I'm sure any of us would be cranky in this situation. She flits from a scared but determined woman, to a high and mighty, look-down-at-everyone, to a kind and loving friend. But even in the moments where she is not likeable, I still really liked her.

One thing I particularly liked was the time Rebecca has given to all the other characters. Yes this is Anne Boleyn's story and she was Queen so she should get the bigger billing etc. But this story is about so much more than just that, and she has given the same amount of time and depth to the secondary characters, the "lesser" characters as she has given to the royals.

Yes it's a thriller and a fantasy and all that, but it only works so well because it's firmly rooted in history. I don't know what Rebecca's background is, but there's clearly knowledge of Anne Boleyn and the period and whatnot - in addition to copious amounts of research I assume - but it's this grounding in reality that makes the fantasy elements feel so real.

It's heavier on narrative and prose than it is in dialogue, which I enjoyed very much. It is all so absorbing, the London of the 1500s the smells and the noise and the dirt and the blood; it sounds horrendous but it is beautifully captured here.

I went to bed relatively early one night and thought I would just read a couple of chapters. And then before I knew it, it was two hours later and I was half way - the other half was read over breakfast. It's just so addictive that I couldn't tear myself away.

The ending was a little left-field for me, it sort of came out of nowhere. Not that it's a negative, it doesn't stop the book being one of the best I've read, it just came as a bit of a surprise.

I've had a slightly weird version of the Six Wives floating around in my head for a few years, and whilst it's not quite as macabre and fantastical as this one is, just the fact that Rebecca has managed to make such a well-known story into her own, gives me belief that maybe I could.
Profile Image for Carlos.
493 reviews22 followers
March 12, 2026
Thanks to NetGalley and Crown Publishing for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest review.

Divorced. Beheaded. Died. Divorced. Beheaded. Survived. That’s what history tells us happened to Henry VIII’s six wives. Or was it? Not according to The Beheading Game, a speculative historical fiction in which Anne Boleyn, Henry’s infamous second wife and mother of the future Queen Elizabeth I, wakes up in her coffin—arrow chest, to be exact—after her execution and sews her own head back on, embarking on a journey for revenge against Henry and those responsible for her downfall.

I must admit I’ve always been fascinated by the Tudor and Elizabethan eras, which are my favorite historical periods to read about, so the book had almost won me over with the concept alone. The synopsis can be a bit misleading, and if you come in expecting a fast-paced, action-driven revenge story, you might be disappointed. What you get instead is an original reimagining of Anne Boleyn’s life, death, and afterlife, with a perfect blend of historical fact, speculative fiction, and a touch of Greek mythology and Arthurian legend.

I loved how the author chose to portray Anne as a strong, educated, and occasionally opinionated woman—clearly ahead of her time. Her character arc throughout the book is compelling, and her relationship with Alice was one of my favorite aspects.

The writing is beautiful without being overwrought, keeping you glued to the pages until a bittersweet and perfectly fitting ending.
Profile Image for sophie ☁️.
554 reviews15 followers
December 1, 2025
What if Anne Boleyn survived her beheading, sewed her own head back on, and made it her life mission to assassinate Henry VIII?

Welcome to The Beheading Game.

One of the wildest ways I have ever, and probably will ever again, start a book review. This was not your standard historical figure retelling. It oozes feminine rage, and delivers a strong message about how a woman being too strong, being too “loud” is just another way to villainise them. I was first taught about the Tudors way back at the tender age of eight, and even then, I remember coming home to my mum and being utterly distraught, that these women didn’t deserve the ending they were dealt.

Is this historically accurate down to a T? No. Does it give Anne Boleyn the ending and revenge arc she truly deserved? Yes, yes it does.

I had a fantastic time reading this book, it was full of heart and also had some lovely humorous moments too. Surpassed all my expectations. Thank you to the author, publisher and NetGalley for the advance copy!
Profile Image for Elyse (ElyseReadsandSpeaks).
1,087 reviews49 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 1, 2026
A bizarre, fun book that I think accurately depicts how Anne Boleyn would have behaved had she survived and sewn her own head back on. I think what was most fun about this is what I noticed myself thinking throughout her journey. I wanted her to go to Henry, I wanted her to show herself, and part of me really wanted them to live happily ever after. Possibly because I know what they don't - the leader Elizabeth turns out to be.

Also, for those of you thinking about reading this book - you should know that Anne is bisexual in this one and it's totally believable. I don't think it's far-fetched to think that a woman so progressive and opinionated in her time would do some exploring.

I think I liked this so much because it wasn't the usual. I read a lot of historical fiction about the Tudors, but they're all based on real events so they're all similar at the core. But clearly, Anne didn't sew her own head back on and live to tell the tale so this book was fun and unexpected. I'd recommend it for anyone looking for a creative twist on Anne Boleyn's story.
Profile Image for Janereads10.
1,033 reviews17 followers
March 13, 2026
Anne Boleyn sews her own head back on and sets out for vengeance. The premise alone sold me.

This explores Anne finding agency in a world where her future was dictated by a king's whims. Her rage against Henry VIII clashes with her lingering affection for him. The push and pull of those feelings - alongside her grief over miscarriages the court deemed inconsequential and her fierce love for Elizabeth - came through powerfully.

I appreciated the symbolism woven throughout. The white bull represents her family's rising power and the prophecy about religious upheaval. The falcon symbolizes her steadfastness as queen. These elements added historical depth.

What held this back: The structure felt circular. Anne's journey from the Tower through London and beyond meandered. The constant back-and-forth slowed the momentum. I kept waiting for the story to build toward her goal, but it felt like she was figuring out what to do next rather than driving forward with purpose.

The fantasy "what if" concept - what would Anne do given another chance? - is compelling. The execution just didn't land for me.

You'll love this if: You want Anne Boleyn reimagined with agency, fantasy resurrection stories, and symbolism-rich historical fiction - and you don't mind a wandering structure.

Thanks to Crown and NetGalley for the advance copy. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Heather Ann Reads 📚.
40 reviews15 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 9, 2026
**ARC Review**

Thank you to Crown Publishing and NetGalley for providing me an electronic ARC in exchange for an honest review.
#TheBeheadingGame #NetGalley #ePub #ARC

💠RELEASE DATE: 24 Mar 2026

💠CONTENT WARNING / TRIGGERS: blood/gore, animal abuse & death, beheading, attempted sexual assault, some physical abuse, grooming, misogyny

💠PLOT OVERVIEW: Anne Boleyn was a woman who existed in real life. She was the Queen of England from 1533 to 1536. Unfortunately, she was betrayed by her husband, King Henry VIII, and beheaded on conspiracy of treason (among other things). This story is a fantastical re-imagining of history where Anne comes back to life, holding her own head, and escapes into the streets of London, where she decides she wants revenge on Henry.

💠CRITIQUES:

Contradictions and hypocrisy. Just a handful of examples:
• Anne’s constant back & forth between “I hate Henry” and “I still love Henry” is honestly infuriating.
• Anne states her urgency to enact vengeance before Jane and Henry get married, yet she lollygags in the field w/the bull and spends a lot of time sleeping.
• Anne is fine with taking Henry from Katherine and justifies doing so, but when Jane takes Henry from Anne, Jane receives Anne’s wrath. Similarly, at the end Anne eventually realizes Henry swindled her but doesn't feel empathy for Jane, who is currently being swindled.
• Anne is conservative and devoutly religious (e.g., she makes it clear she thinks prostitution is "wicked"), yet one of the first things she does as a reanimated corpse is let some random guy finger her. And then she steals his money.

Anne is completely unlikable & readers are given no motivation or incentive to root for Anne.
• Anne reminds me of the "let them eat cake" lady that got so much backlash for her tone deaf video. That's honestly who Anne feels like -- an out-of-touch aristocrat complaining about walking too much in her fancy slippers while Alice sells her body to provide for her children. In addition to being part of the bourgeoisie, Anne is snide, rude, willfully ignorant, and prideful to the point where she has delusions of grandeur. She has derogatory behavior toward poor people - believing they are unkempt/dirty, uneducated, impolite heathens who are incapable of proper manners and speech.
• Ultimate “Pick-Me” behavior. She’s constantly derogatory to other women - picking apart their appearances, occupations, etc. (ex: "Lady Shelton had the droopy face of a heifer, and wide, bovine hips from birthing no less than ten children, an astonishing number, a barnyard number."). She condemns women as 'prostitutes' but does not condemn the men who seek it out. She HATES being referred to as "the dead whore Queen" yet has no problem calling Alice a prostitute. She cries about how she's treated as a woman - which, is fair - BUT then belittles other women who aren’t as educated, or wealthy, or attractive as she is. It's giving white feminism - privilege rooted in oppression, racism, and misogyny.

Real-life Anne & Story Anne are in juxtaposition.
• Real-life Anne is said to have been giving and kind to the lower class/poor people... Meanwhile, Story Anne makes it clear via snide remarks and thoughts that she is above poor people in every way. She has contempt for them, even disdain.
• Real-life Anne spoke in a flowery, Old English kind of way… Story Anne speaks very casually and modernly. The reason the tone feels so jarring to me is because it doesn't sound like Anne's voice. The contrast is even clearer because Lehmann included excerpts in the book from Real-life Anne, i.e., the speech Real-life Anne gave before her beheading, on Page 2 of the book:
Good Christian people, I am come hither to die, for according to the law, and by the law I am judged to die, and therefore I will speak nothing against it. I am come hither to accuse no man, nor to speak anything of that, whereof I am accused and condemned to die, but I pray God save the king and send him long to reign over you, for a gentler nor a more merciful prince was there never: and to me he was ever a good, a gentle and sovereign lord. And if any person will meddle of my cause, I require them to judge the best. And thus I take my leave of the world and of you all, and I heartily desire you all to pray for me. O Lord have mercy on me, to God I commend my soul.
We have this as a reference for Anne's voice right in the beginning, so when Story Anne's saying things like, "You can't be serious", and "Just shut up", and "even if she'd been unfaithful, which she wasn't", it feels too modern, too casual. Lehmann is writing in her own voice instead of in Anne's - which I'd be okay with if this book didn't focus so much on Anne's (real) past. My opinion: If you're going to include a ton of real history for context, you should be more diligent about capturing the voice/tone of the real people from that time period.

Unnecessary and constant flashbacks consumed the narrative.
• It's literally just one big exposition dump, closer to a historical retelling of Anne’s life before she was beheaded than an adventurous revenge story. (Author's note states this "isn't a biography", then almost immediately after, it states Lehmann did a ton of research on Anne's biography.) Honestly, I could not care less about Anne’s childhood or the first time she met Henry. I really couldn’t. Anne's feelings of rage, of sadness, of confusion over her beheading could have been clearly illustrated without revisiting every single memory that led up to this point. We spent SO much time in the past that the story in the present was ultimately lost.
• Tell me why one of the flashbacks contains the imagery of Henry’s partially erect penis flapping against his thigh. Tell me fucking WHY.

There was no feminine rage… Like, at all.
• It feels like such a disservice to what was marketed to me... This was barely a revenge story, let alone a ‘feminine’ revenge story. Especially when the female protagonist is more akin to a puppet of the patriarchy instead of a warrior of feminism. A Goodreads review by Mikey said it best: “PLEASE do not promise feminine rage, feminine revenge, or vengeance if merely one act of violence against a man occurs. That’s not what feminine rage is."

Anne's reaction to her reawakening is... underwhelming.
• It seems like she's neither terrified nor shocked. She almost has a blasé attitude toward waking up. I think a normal reaction - especially realizing you're holding your own head - would be to freak the fuck out. Anne doesn't do this.

Pointless love interest inserted for checking the diversity box.
• Added nothing to the progression of the plot or to the growth of Anne’s character.
• It doesn’t make sense how Alice fell for Anne. Anne is straight-up mean to Alice. As soon as she meets Alice, she's taken aback by how well-spoken, well-dressed, and composed this "prostitute and fenlander" is. When Alice decides to travel with Anne and help her, Anne berates Alice multiple times over her status (ex: "Who was Alice, an actual prostitute, to proffer such an insult?"), using prostitution against Alice as a shame tactic whenever Alice rightfully called out Anne for bring a privileged asshole. Then suddenly, Alice just cares about Anne and you want me to believe this happened genuinely? I understand Alice was put in the story to figuratively open Anne’s eyes, but their storyline was so underdeveloped. It really came across as shallow and forced. It felt like a sapphic love interest was thrown in for popularity points or allyship points, rather than for representation.

The Green Man. What was the point of him? What is the point of Anne seeing/hallucinating this guy randomly? Was he really there, or was he a figment of Anne’s imagination? Was he supposed to symbolize or represent something deeper? Who even is the Green Man?

Tension feels completely manufactured for the story.
• Any threat or tension feels like it was made for the sake of the plot and does not follow any sort of logic. Example: Anne goes into the castle under-cover, repeatedly saying she cannot be identified by anyone and must remain hidden. Later, she stands in an open doorframe, in full view of a group of men, and Henry ends up turning around and seeing her standing there. No logical person would do that while actively trying to be sneaky and unseen. And we know Anne is going to somehow get away with it despite being caught like a deer in headlights (her plot armor is really something), so there are no stakes.

Narrative becomes so unbelievable that it breaks immersion.
• We must suspend disbelief too often. It doesn’t just disrupt immersion; it breaks immersion entirely. You must take great care when re-writing a story of a real person that took place in the real world. Up until the beheading, Story Anne’s life is the same as Real-life Anne’s life. The fantastical element of the story is supposed to be Anne coming back to life after her beheading; outside of that, the world this takes place in is supposed to be our own world – our physics, our environments, our realities. I think that’s a safe assumption.
And yet: 1) Anne escapes palace guards – not once, not twice, but FOUR times; 2) Anne breaks into a house and finds a sewing basket right there by the bed, without really looking for it; 3) an independent, hard-working peasant woman takes pity on Anne, even though Anne has been nothing but rude to her; 4) Anne survives the waters of the Thames; 5) Anne never loses the expensive gems shoved in her bodice, regardless of being swept up in strong currents; 6) Anne hides under the altar in Henry’s room while guards sweep the area, searching every area/crevice except under the altar; 7) a complete deus ex machina in the form of a white bull finds Anne, even though bulls do not roam the English wilderness, and it is not only completely tame to only her but protects her and understands her words.
... It’s not just lucky coincidences; it’s hugely convenient. TOO convenient. As soon as Anne wakes up, it’s like she’s in a different world – one that is tailored for her to ensure the success of her quest.

No MC character growth.
• With all the exposition dumps and self-reflection Anne does on her journey, you’d think she’d have more ego-blasting epiphanies. I'd argue that for 96% of the book, she remains fairly consistent. She can somewhat sympathize more with poor people (I think it’s mostly just Alice and her family, being the token 'good' poors) but still sees poor people as dirty, classless, uneducated people making poor life decisions. Her bitterness towards other women doesn't seem to have changed. Up until the VERY end she goes back and forth about her love for Henry, with seemingly little resistance. (The cognitive dissonance isn’t there. One moment she's looking at the stars for an A & H together [for Anne and Henry, respectively] because "their destinies are intertwined" and the next she's thinking of slicing his head off).

Anne eats a rabbit. RAW. And she is generally FINE.
• I don't care that she's reanimated. You can't feel the blood in your veins, air in your lungs, yet defy human anatomy. There are significant health risks of eating raw meat, including parasites and diseases like Tularemia - or "rabbit fever" - caused by the bacteria Francisella tularensis that has a mortality rate of up to 50% if left untreated.

Everything fantastical is written off as ‘oh well, who knows’.
• We see inside Anne's mind, and Lehmann has Anne wonder about these bizarre happenstances -- e.g., how she's alive after being beheaded, how her neck healed after she stitched it back on, why a white bull came to her -- but Anne essentially ‘shrugs it off’ and goes about her day. There is no attempt at explanation for why or how these things happened. It’s as if these are great universal mysteries that will never be solved – as if painting these fantastical impossibilities as plausible miracles is an effective or adequate substitution for grounded explanations. Or, did I miss the part that explains why a woman can shapeshift into a falcon or why an uncannily-intelligent white bull comes out of a forest to guide and protect Anne?

Complete lack of momentum.
• Nothing really happens in the book. Allegedly the whole story takes place over 9 days but it feels like a matter of hours because NOTHING HAPPENS. It’s after the 82% mark that Anne finally begins her trek to the castle for Henry, and it’s around the 97% mark when she finally gets her revenge. Yes, you read those numbers right. Anne spends more time talking about her insatiable hunger than she does actually seeking vengeance. The pace feels even slower due to the repetitive flashbacks. Taken from user BiblioBrandie's Goodreads review of this novel: “Rather than reimagining these figures, the author simply retells Tudor history with occasional fantastical when Anne appears. […] For a book about one of history’s most dynamic, controversial women returning from the grave, this should have been propulsive and electrifying. Instead, it was a slog.”

Repetition and redundancy are antagonizing.
• “I’m a victim” narrative is shoved into our faces every chapter. It's... Tiring. We get it. You were betrayed by someone you loved. You were wrongly beheaded. WE GET IT. We don't need to be reminded every 2-3 pages that you were hurt by Henry in ten thousand different ways. (Remember what I said earlier about feminine rage?) Anne repeats the same inner dialogue, mantras, feelings, and even memories. If you cut out the repetition, the superfluous depictions of everything, the biographical content, and focus more on revenge, this would make a great short story.

I, too, was not a fan of the (completely unnecessary) violence towards the bear.
• You can tell me 'but it’s a historical thing.' I know. I know bearbaiting was popular in that time period. And this scene was gruesome. Having Anne attend this blood sport to watch and cheer on a blind bear being brutalized was not necessary. Sure, Anne has this weird moment of recognizing symbolism between the bearbaiting and her own life. It wasn't a very strong relation and it wasn't very good. It also wasn't symbolically carried through the novel, like imagery that stayed with Anne throughout her trek. It was not a point of contingency for meeting Alice and it wasn’t a moment inspiring personal growth. There was no reason for Anne to attend other than to fill pages with activity to make this book longer.

The ending.
• Because wtf do you MEAN she suddenly transforms into a falcon and escapes the murder scene? What do you MEAN she goes to see her daughter and is able to shift back into a human?? What do you MEAN she turns back into a falcon and flies away to be with Alice???

💠REVIEW SUMMARY: I went into this expecting a riveting feminist revenge novel and got instead an Anne Boleyn biography dump with some unexplained fantastical elements.

💠RECOMMEND?: No.

💠RATING:
⭐ (1 out of 5 stars)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Courtney H.
403 reviews31 followers
January 30, 2026
When Anne Boleyn wakes up, she's in an arrow box and missing her head. She has no idea how she survived her beheading, but she immediately makes plans to seek her revenge on the husband who murdered her.

The premise is intriguing, but the story doesn't live up to the promise of the blurb. It takes Anne over two thirds of the novel to make it back to London after leaving in headless disgrace. Anne's journey is not an adventure but a slow, plodding pace until the end of the book.

I received an electronic ARC of this title from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Samantha.
25 reviews
August 31, 2025
Rating: 4.5🌟

Synopsis: Anne Boleyn unexpectedly wakes up in a coffin following her beheading and must navigate unfamiliar realities of London to exact her justice – once she, of course, reattaches her head.

Review: While this is a work of historical fiction (with a dash of fantasy), the amount of research and consideration that went into crafting this novel is evident. The writing is beautiful and most of it weaves the present moment and past stories through the mind of Anne Boleyn, a compelling main character that’s loud, opinionated, and unconventional. This story showcasing her drive and determination will resonate with readers as she aims to best the patriarchal system that wrongs even the top women in society.

Perfect read for any fans of historical fiction x feminine rage 🗡️👑✨

Thank you to Rebecca Lehmann, Crown Publishing and NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Stephanie.
414 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 15, 2026
First, I did not finish this book. It's lost me less than halfway through. I met the author at an event and was very intrigued by the concept of this plot. Following Anne Boleyn's beheading, she wakes up in her coffin then escapes in the early dawn. Then sews her own head back before taking revenge.

Kudos to the author - she has clearly done a tremendous amount of research but it feels like she's creamed it all into the book. At one point I felt like I was reading a history text rather than a fictional retelling. For example, if you've just down sown your head back on why would you walk into a crowd, go to a bear baiting event, then mess around with a guy on the riverbank?

I wanted there to be more of a story of revenge and plotting but this felt like a history lecture. Others loved this story so I may have missed the point.
Profile Image for Jennelle.
99 reviews1 follower
August 11, 2025
This book is phenomenal. From the intensity of the opening scene to the satisfying conclusion, it doesn't hold your hand. As a woman, it loudly proclaims so many of our truths. Strong, fierce, intelligent, loyal, brave, ill-treated, villainized, vengeful, soft, loving, brutal, gentle, and everything throughout all of time. I will definitely be buying this book when it is released, and have a list of people who will be receiving it as a gift. The blending of thoughtful, powerful research with the paranormal and the symbolic is truly astounding. A work of art that is at once accessible and elevated. Thank you to NetGalley for allowing me to review this Advanced Reader Copy.
Profile Image for Horror Nerd.
218 reviews7 followers
September 3, 2025
This is alternate history mixed in with VERY strong magical realism vibes.
After Anne's mysterious resurrection, she slowly formulates a plan & embarks on an odd journey to achieve it. She sees a side of England she never did as a royal, and meets some horrible people but also some that show her genuine kindness. The ending (especially her final meeting with her young daughter Elizabeth) was sad and hopeful at the same time. This novel gives Anne Boleyn a happy ending, something that she definitely deserved.

Thank you to NetGalley for a copy of this book.
Profile Image for Mikey ಠ◡ಠ.
411 reviews44 followers
December 22, 2025
Ok, that's it, I'm so done reading any of Henry the VIII's six wives retellings, they continue to give NOTHING while promising to be the retelling of my dreams. Anne Boleyn wakes up from the dead, SEWS HER HEAD BACK ON, and goes to murder Henry for his crimes against her? Like let's fucking gooo dude! I wish that's what I got. I'm not saying the author isn't passionate about the subject matter, based on the historical details and the author's note and acknowledgement it's very clear to me the passion it there. The character work, however, left a lot to be desired. I am not joking with you when I say Anne could not, for the life (or unlife) of her, go even one minute without calling any other women in her sight line a whore or a prostitute, or both. Babe, I know it's the 1500s and therapy isn't even a glimmer in anyone's eye yet, but the projection is truly off the charts. She spent so much of her time thinking about how outraged it made her when other people called her a whore or the whore queen and how it wasn't true and then she'd look at another woman and be like "Oh my god, this fucking whore." Relax, reeeeelaaaaxxx.

This made it extremely difficult to root for Anne in any capacity, which is a feat in itself because I was excited and seated for her to kill Henry. Also if you were excited about Anne's quest for vengeance, I would really lower my excitement and my expectations if I were you.

Now this is the part of the review while I take a moment to call the marketing people in for a second. Gather around, everyone, take a seat in my office. Some of you may need to stand, my office is small, they don't pay me a lot. Now lean in, place your hands on my desk so I can touch my hand to yours and look each and every one of you in the eye when I say this next part: Please. Please please PLEASE do not promise feminine rage, feminine revenge or vengeance if merely one act of violence against a man occurs. That's not what feminine rage is. Let me tell you what it is. Feminine rage is when a woman goes absolutely buck wild on anyone and everyone who's done her dirty. Our dark heroine may be dislikable, but we love her for it, we're rooting for her and we're aggressively defending her rights and her wrongs as she goes.

There's also the Alice of it all, I do not know why Alice was there. I understand part of her purpose is to call Anne out on her shit and open her eyes to the way of the world for the small folk. She's there to make Anne have several seats because SOMEONE needed to humble her. But the "something more" between them...? Why? I'm always open to broadening or changing a character's sexuality, especially in a retelling. I think it can be interesting and bring a different dynamic to the story. But I got the same feeling from this book that I got from the other six wives retelling which felt like I was watching the author smash two character's faces together and saying "Now kiss." And if you were excited about the something more between Alice and Anne, again, curb that enthusiasm.

Also I just need to talk about how when Anne sews her head back on she steals a sewing kit from some lady and then doesn't even bother to return it after. She just drop kicks the kit into some bushes and goes on her way. Like? Put it back?!?!?!? Anne also goes to a bear baiting event, for reasons???? And both relates to the bear for its anger at what's happening to it (it's really horrible and I don't wanna talk about it too much. It felt like the author wanted to flex their historical knowledge but I'm a sensitive cry baby so I really hated that part.) and is scared of it and is going on about how basically its anger makes it danger and it needs to die. Girl- Like I'm not saying Anne doesn't have some growth by the end, she was just sooooo dislikable for the first half that I didn't really care that she was a little less shitty by the end. Her growth also just felt really abrupt and unearned.

I really wanted to like this, you have no idea. But woof.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free eARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for savage_book_review.
402 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 15, 2026
*Please note, I was provided with an ARC version of this book by NetGalley and am voluntarily leaving an honest review*

So this was... not what I expected. Ultimately, the blurb had led me to believe this might be something of a historical fantasy with a side of adventure and feminine rage. What I got was more of a retrospective look at Anne's life while she was on a walking tour of London and the Fens. It's a strangely gentle read and, had I been prepared for that, I probably would have enjoyed it far more than I did.

I think my biggest issue arises from the fact that it's got such a strong and promising start! The claustrophobia and confusion of Anne waking up in an arrow chest with her head tucked by her knees is really well conveyed, and the initial wanderings to find a way to get herself back in one piece and figure out her next steps really feel like it's setting the scene for something unique. But thereafter, it just falls a bit flat. Anne has a goal in mind, yes, and it has a deadline, which should give a sense of time pressure and tension to the work. However, the pacing of the writing removes any driving momentum - very much like Anne herself, it just goes on its meandering way.

It's certainly not an issue that there's no logical explanation (given or implied) as to why Anne has been able to come back; I'm always very much in the 'just go with it' camp when it comes to magical/supernatural goings on in books. That being said, however, by the end I was left feeling that the author had a great idea for the premise that had been somewhat squandered. There are really only two (three at a push) other significant 'otherworldly' happenings within the entire story, and all feel like they have been plucked from myth/folklaw and just thrown in so there is some other kind of magic happening. The ending in particular really frustrated me as there is a clear and obvious alternative that, with just a few sentences, would have fulfilled far better the desires Anne expresses throughout the book and kept a little sparkle of magic carrying forward.

I did enjoy the idea of Anne being able to look back at the various events of her own life and use that to understand her lack of knowledge about the 'real' world. Having said that, again there's no real results to be seen from this extended reminiscing - there isn't a huge amount of self-reflection during these moments, and ultimately it came across to me as just a rewriting of Anne's biography from a slightly different perspective. If you're looking for a general overview (albeit a not entirely historically accurate one) of Anne's life but don't want a dry textbook, this could be a good place to start. I'm just not sure what it adds to the story itself.

Anne herself is relatively well portrayed here; although she has haughty and arrogant moments that reflect her status as noblewoman and ex-Queen, generally she does come across as a sympathetic character and a woman wronged. But I also found myself incredibly frustrated that some of her actions play right into the stereotypes that come from her trial. Throughout the book, Anne continues to reiterate her chasitity before marriage, her love for her husband and that he was her first, last and only lover. And yet inside 24 hours of her reanimation, she's got a random man with his head under her skirts, and later on there's intimation of an interest in another woman. I'd have been totally on board with a full on FF romance developing and the enjoyment of another man's company if there was the drive of a full on feminine rage arc where she's out of f*cks and out for revenge, but the fact that it's not that kind of story just makes these acts feel like a disservice to her. Overall, the story made contradictions out of her thoughts and actions, leaving her character and motivations somewhat confused.

Generally speaking, the writing style itself was beautifully done. While written with today's spelling, grammar etc, it manages to capture that imagined cadence and inflection of ye olde English while still being very easy to read and enjoy. However, there are a few occasions where modern-sounding idioms/descriptors appear, and they are really quite jarring.

For me overall, this was a really interesting premise, with one of my favourite historical figures set centre stage. But it just didn't follow through.
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