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White Rose Rebel

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White Rose Rebel tells the riveting and turbulent story of the historical figure known as Colonel Anne--Scottish heroine and female "Braveheart"--who risked everything for the love of her country and its rightful king. Anne Farquharson, a tempestuous and independentminded daughter of Scotland, is elated when the Jacobites rebel in 1745, fighting to regain the Stuart throne of Scotland for Bonnie Prince Charlie, and horrified when her husband, Aeneas Macintosh, joins the English army. She raises his clan and, with her previous lover at her side, joins the uprising to become its legendary Colonel Anne. Incorporating fascinating historical detail about the military role of Scottish women during the eighteenth century, Janet Paisley creates a marvelously entertaining tale of this extraordinary young woman who used her heart, sexuality, intellect, and sword to defend her people. Rich in intrigue and period detail and with a compelling cast of characters certain to captivate fans of Philippa Gregory, White Rose Rebel marks the exciting debut of a wonderfully fresh and vivid voice in historical fiction, as it explores the grand themes of civil war, women's rights and national identity, love and marital discord, loyalty and betrayal.

400 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Janet Paisley

26 books21 followers
Janet Paisley was an award winning poet, author, playwright, non-fiction and scriptwriter, writing in Scots and English. Born in 1948 in Ilford, Essex of Scottish parents, she grew up in Avonbridge, a small village in Central Scotland. Marriage, a teaching career, the birth of seven sons, the death of one, and divorce followed.

A prolific and popular writer, first published in 1979, she features at national and international festivals and is published, performed, broadcast and taught on the curriculum from primary to university at home and abroad. Her work has been translated into German, Russian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Spanish, Hungarian, Ukranian and Italian and is widely anthologised.


Janet’s awards include BAFTA and RTS nominations for Long Haul, a 2000 Creative Scotland Award to write Not for Glory; 1999 Canongate Prize; 1996 Peggy Ramsay Memorial award for Refuge; National, Scottish National, Swanage Arts and MacDiarmid Trophy poetry prizes; Sutton, Scotwrite and BBC prose prizes. In 1996 Alien Crop was shortlisted as Scottish Book of the Year and Sooans Nicht was Critics Play of the Year. In 2003 Not for Glory was in the World Book Day Top Ten Scottish Books and featured on the nation’s favourite books of all time list of 2005.

A writer who thrived on the discipline of different forms, she began her career with the short story. Five collections of poetry followed, interspersed with short fiction, plays for theatre, radio and TV drama, and film. Other publications include two books of short stories, a novella, an historical novel and occasional journalism. A regular visitor to schools, skilled in both humorous and dramatic performances of her own work, Janet wrote for and appeared in several Mayfest productions with Bread & Circuses, a group of writers dedicated to lively and entertaining theatrical presentations of the written word.

An inadvertent literary ambassador, she visited Russia to speak at academic symposiums and the Tolstoy commemoration, initiated a Scottish literature collection in Voronezh university, took part in Barcelona’s theatrical Cartographies of Desire and in festival reading tours of Paris, Moscow, Slovakia and Lithuania, and set up the first Scottish PEN women writers’ committee.

While raising her six sons as an unsupported single parent, financial assistance from the Scottish Arts Council literature and drama departments proved invaluable. Over a fifteen year period from 1990, she held two SAC writing fellowships and the Glasgow South writing residency, and was awarded writers and playwrights bursaries in 1997, 1999, 2001 and 2005. She also taught courses in creative writing for Glasgow University’s Department of Adult & Continuing Education.

In July 2007, when her youngest son graduated and a second grandson had joined the family, she published her first novel, White Rose Rebel. The Jacobite connection, begun more than two decades earlier with radio stories and a stage play, continued with writing the character stations for the Culloden Battlefield Visitor Centre.

“Janet Paisley’s poems have an intensity that makes them shine with truth.. she enters Sylvia Plath territory and emerges looking more honest and passionate than Plath. She could be winningly self-deprecating and deadly serious at the same time...” Books in Scotland.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 96 reviews
Profile Image for Gary.
1,034 reviews254 followers
October 21, 2020
A beautifully written saga about a great heroine of Scottish history-Colonel Anne Farquarson-Mackintosh, who played a kingpin role in the 1745 Jacobite rebellion at the tender age of 22. when Bonnie Prince Charlie raises Scotland's Highland clans to capture Britain's throne from the Hanoverian George I, Ann rallies her clan to his cause. what hinders things and enrages her is the betrayal by her husband Aneas who joins up with the English. she then takes up with her former lover, the valiant McGilvery A lusty, lively, energetic, humorous, tragic, vivid historic novel - the battle scenes bring home the horrors of war, the dialogue is rich, the sex scenes lingering and powerful, from the sexual wakening described of Anne when she was a teenager at the beginning of the novel.
Anne Farquarson was a Highland heroine, a lusty and beautiful women and latter day Boadicea willing to give up everything for her country's freedom and the rightful king and heir of Britain.

The book combines a meticulous study of 18th century Scottish history with a lively imagination, and the animating contest for freedom with the horrors and tregedies of the English genocide of Scotland after the Jacobite rebellion was crushed. The villains such as the obnoxious Duke of Cumberland and the demonic General Hawley are well drawn. The Beguiling Scottish women such as Anne's engaging younger sister Elizabeth and the peasant girl Jessie and strong and fearless warrior men show us the wonder of the Scottish nation.
Profile Image for Molly.
450 reviews
August 8, 2012
O que poderei dizer deste livro? Numa só palavra, posso dizer que é simplesmente maravilhoso. Tem uma enorme força, que nos guia através das suas páginas e história. Excelente!

"A Rosa Rebelde" provém de um intenso estudo sobre as personagens e os acontecimentos presentes na obra. E desse estudo surgiu uma história de amor e guerra maravilhosamente bem escrito, bem desenvolvido e bem descrito. As descrições são soberbas: detalhes oportunos, nada maçadores, muito bem conseguidos. É possível imaginar as paisagens, as cenas descritas, as personagens e os sentimentos.

Este é um Romance Histórico muito bom. Nada "meloso" nem lamechas, cheio de ação e intriga. Dá-nos conhecimentos sobre a Escócia e sobre o que aconteceu naquele tempo. No inicio é nos apresentado um glossário de termos em gaélico, para nos ajudar a entende algumas expressões das personagens, bem como algumas notas da autora, para contextualizar as personagens e a época.

Nem sempre é fácil gostar muito de Romances Históricos, em especial porque muitas vezes deparo-me mais com livros onde abunda mais o romance do que o histórico, porém, tal não acontece neste livro. Este livro é, provavelmente o meu livro deste género favorito, pelo menos até agora.

O livro retrata a vida de Anne Farquharson, a Lady McIntosh, uma jovem mulher das Terras Altas. Anne foi uma guerreira, que reuniu o seu povo para lutar conta a União com a Inglaterra, nos anos de 1700 (nasceu em 1723, liderou/participou a rebelião aos 21/22 anos). As várias rebeliões da Escócia são mencionadas e relatadas através das personagens. E, com a chegada do príncipe Charles Edward Stuart, que ajudaria no combate aos ingleses, com a ajuda das tropas francesas, Anne sente que a vitória poderia ser real e a liberdade de novo conquistada. Dividida entre a lealdade ao marido, Aeneas McIntosh, ou a lealdade à rebelião, Anne decide seguir para a batalha, com o seu fiel amigo e amado Alexander MacGillivray, chefe de clã e um dos comandante das tropas dos Jacobitas.
Dividida, Anne tem de optar por muitas coisas e fazer muitas escolhas, sabendo que muitos dependem do que decidir.

Muitos outros acontecimentos preenchem a história, e muitos desses acontecimentos são o que, para mim, mais significado deu à história, pois contribuíram imensamente para dar mais sentimento à história. Existem cenas ao longo da obra que são deveras cheias de sentimento e emoção.

Um livro muito bom, com detalhes históricos que são muito interessantes (onde a cultura escocesa é nos mostrada), com personagens muito bem desenvolvidas e descritas.

Um ambiente muito bem descrito, cheio de detalhes e História.
Recomendo a todos os que gostam deste género de livros, e a todos em geral! Um Romance Histórico muito bonito e bem desenvolvido, bem escrito!

No Blog:
http://oimaginariodoslivros.blogspot....
Profile Image for Misfit.
1,638 reviews357 followers
August 20, 2008
I couldn't get past 50 pages before the bodice ripping scenes went over the top. From what I gather this book is nothing but gratuitous sex interspersed with greatly detailed battle scenes, neither of which appeals to this reader. I do like a romance on occasion but it helps if there's some chemistry there and you won't find it in this book. Get it from the library if you must.
Profile Image for Joana.
120 reviews9 followers
September 18, 2011
Este livro conta a história de Anne Farquharson, a Lady McIntosh, uma notável e controversa mulher que combateu pelos rebeldes escoceses pela separação da Escócia da Inglaterra, no século XVIII.

Ao princípio parecia-me um romance bastante levezinho e superficial mas mais para o fim comecei a gostar bastante. É tudo menos um romance cor-de-rosa. Para além das cenas das batalhas, que me pareceram bastante realistas, são descritos tantos horrores e tanta crueldade gratuita e de uma forma tão intensa e tão visual que me impressionaram bastante. Depois há todos aqueles aspectos acerca da cultura das Terras Altas, nomeadamente do papel da mulher na sociedade, que desconhecia completamente e que adorei conhecer. A história está muitíssimo bem construída, vai crescendo de intensidade, a própria Anne “cresce” ao longo do livro.
Profile Image for CLM.
2,914 reviews206 followers
January 24, 2009
It is a bad thing when one begins to dislike the heroine and hope she will be hanged. And Culloden is never fun to read about in the first place. . .
Profile Image for Carina Carvalho.
671 reviews18 followers
October 6, 2017
Este é um daqueles livros que não consegui parar de ler. Primeiro porque a historia é sobre a Escócia e a sua tentativa de independência e é uma época que me fascina. Um povo rebelde, corajoso, selvagem e com umas tradições maravilhosas. Acima de tudo de respeitar o papel da mulher em igual com o homem.
A história divide se entre as escolhas de um homem preso aos seus deveres e lealdades para com o seu clã, onde é sistematicamente obrigado a pensar unicamente com a cabeça e uma jovem rebelde, corajosa e imprudente que pensa unicamente com o coração.
Resultado... Uma união difícil entre opostos tão grandes mas unidos por um grande amor um por o outro e por uma pátria prestes a se perder.
Para mim um livro a não perder.
Profile Image for Viviana.
39 reviews46 followers
July 24, 2012
Numa cultura em que os jovens podiam ter relações antes do casamento, em que as mulheres não dependiam dos maridos nem por eles eram subjugadas, e em que o adultério e o divórcio eram comuns, não seria de estranhar a revolta das gentes das Terras Altas contra a Inglaterra e o pacto de União que lhes roubava a liberdade, a identidade e o sustento do seu povo.
Nota-se desde cedo o cuidado da autora na pesquisa histórica, nomeadamente pelos
Admiradora confessa de romances históricos, aprendo sempre algo quando leio um. Apesar de já ler lido alguns sobre a inssurreição de 1745, esta é a primeira vez que conheço a história da Lady McIntosh e o papel que desempenhou na rebelião.
Anne MacIntosh é muito mais do que aparenta ser. Filha do chefe do clã Farquaharson, herda dele a ambição numa Escócia livre. Apesar de admirar a sua coragem confesso que a achei teimosa e inconsequente ao confiar o destino de todo o seu clã num príncipe mimado que não sabia liderar uma batalha. Com a derrota na batalha de Culloden em 1746, Anne é obrigada a assistir ao genocídio de todos aqueles que participaram na revolta, pessoas que amava e com as quais crescera.
Há, desde cedo, um triângulo amoroso que coloca Anne entre o seu amante Alexander McGillivray e o melhor amigo deste, o homem com quem ela se casou, Aeneas McIntosh. Apesar de bastante bem conseguida a dinâmica do romance entre a protagonista e o McGillivray, não senti o mesmo na relação entre esta e o marido que poderia ter sido melhor desenvolvida. No final, fiquei mesmo com dúvidas em relação aos verdadeiros sentimentos de Anne que preferia Alexander pelo seu amor livre de complicações ao amor intenso que sentia pelo marido visto que este último lha causava dor.
Apesar da sua coragem e do papel de protagonista neste romance pertencer à Lady McIntosh, confesso que a personagem que mais me cativou foi Aeneas, o chefe dos McIntosh e chefe dos clãs. Forçado a "trair" o seu povo e a sua própria ambição de libertar a Escócia, abandonado e desprezado pela mulher mas consciente dos obstáculos à verdadeira independência e das consequências que a derrota trará ao seu povo, Aeneas assume uma posição mais defensiva pensando antes no seu povo e no seu papel como chefe dos clãs. Apesar da falta de confiança da esposa, McIntosh perdoa-a e luta por manter o que resta do clã vivo após o massacre em Culloden. Trata-se de um homem que ama e que perdoa, que luta para manter o pouco que lhe resta e que arrisca tudo pelos seus.
No final, acabei por gostar bastante do livro cuja leitura nunca se tornou aborrecida ou forçada. Escrito com ritmo acelerado e com constantes mudanças de plano, tornou a leitura interessante e pouco monótona. O que verdadeiramente me encantou foram as relações entre personagens secundárias como Jessie e Will, ou MacBean e a mulher pois pareceram-me muito mais reais que o enredo amoroso principal.
Este livro tem também uma componente didáctica pois a detalhada pesquisa histórica desenvolvida pela autora, e muito bem colocada no livro, dá-nos relatos detalhados do sistema organizado como funcionavam os clãs, dos usos e costumes das Terras Altas, e das batalhas, um palco sangrento de crueldade e morte. Permite-nos também conhecer melhor esta cultura em que a mulher tinha já um papel decisivo não só na vida familiar mas também em assuntos políticos, mantende-se independente.
Apesar de ter gostado bastante das frases em gaélico que a autora inseriu ao longo do romance preferia, por uma questão prática, que tivessem inserido a tradução como notas de rodapé e não no início do livro evitando assim interromper a leitura para ir à procura do glossário.

1 review
June 1, 2008
I loved this book. White Rose Rebel is historical fiction at its best. The story is based on real people and events and is about the passionate conflict between a couple caught up in civil war in Scotland. The main character, Anne Farquharson, is a wilful young woman with strong political views who marries a highland clan chief, Aeneas McIntosh, thinking he has the same opinions. When the Jacobite rising of 1745 starts, he does what he thinks is sensible and goes to fight for the government.

Anne does the opposite and raises her husband’s clan to fight against him. Her husband’s cousin and best friend is also Anne’s ex-lover. He takes her side and leads her troops in battle. Inevitably, they fall in love again. As Colonel Anne, she is the cause of other powerful women joining the rebels. More than once she offends the English government by outwitting their army. Her enemies plan to capture and hang her.

This isn't romance but a heartbreaking, realistic love story involving three admirable, believable characters divided by politics and separated by war. Janet Paisley’s writing is so visual it’s like watching a movie with fantastic scenery. You can smell and taste it. The pages of this fast-moving novel turn themselves. But the details of how life was lived are all there, from smoky homes to personal habits and clothing, delicious-sounding food, wild parties, body-strewn battlefields, spies, torture, plots, betrayal, ghastly prisons and brutal executions. It’s all so well-written, the pace of the story doesn’t let up for a minute.

For me, the characters were superb, unforgettable, with kind and cruel people on both sides. Some are heroic, despicable or brutish. Others are likeable, confused or amusing. But it feels like you live and fight with these people, laugh and cry with them and have the same hopes and fears. At least I did. There is realistic sex and violence as these are realistic people but it’s not gratuitous and the ending is extremely emotive.

White Rose Rebel is an exciting historic adventure and a great love story but its themes of equality and democracy are perennial. There are many layers adding up to a moving, impressive novel about the freedom of individuals and nations. While there are many Jacobite novels, none quite like this, the book I was most reminded of is ‘Gone with the Wind’.
Profile Image for Célia | Estante de Livros.
1,191 reviews278 followers
January 25, 2016
A Rosa Rebelde conta a história da escocesa Anne Farquarson, a "coronela" que liderou os rebeldes jacobitas na guerra de 1745, numa tentativa de resgatar a independência da Escócia da soberania inglesa. Filha de John Farquarson, desde cedo Anne se torna sensível às questões da independência escocesa e quando casa com o chefe do clã MacIntosh, os dois entram em conflito porque Anne defende o apoio ao príncipe exilado Charles Edward Stuart, que teria o direito de reclamar o trono escocês, mas o seu marido não é da mesma opinião.

O livro relata este período conturbado da história escocesa com um bom nível de detalhe, tendo por base uma visível detalhada pesquisa histórica. O relato destes acontecimentos é intercalado com a vida romanceada de Anne, que alivia a densidade dos pormenores históricos presentes, apesar de a ligação entre estes dois aspectos da obra nem sempre ser bem conseguido. Para além disto, achei que as personagens e as ligações entre elas também podiam ter sido melhor exploradas. No entanto, e apesar destes aspectos que apontei, a leitura foi muito agradável e nunca se tornou aborrecida. Uma das coisas que mais me agradou (e surpreendeu) foi conhecer a cultura escocesa da época, desde a lógica dos clãs à importância e liberdade dada às mulheres. De facto, era um modo de pensar muito à frente do seu tempo.

Como gosto bastante de romances históricos, onde posso juntar ao prazer da leitura à aquisição de conhecimento sobre acontecimentos passados, este livro cumpriu bem o seu papel; apesar de não ser uma obra literária excepcional, julgo que será especialmente apreciado por quem gosta de romances históricos.
Profile Image for Filipa.
1,866 reviews304 followers
July 3, 2012
3,5 stars

(http://labirinto-livros.blogspot.pt/2...)

A Rosa Rebelde é um romance histórico que se baseia em informações e personagens verídicas e que povoaram a nossa terra há séculos atrás. É um relato que agrega o melhor dos dois mundos - a veracidade histórica e o romance intenso. Lady Anne Farquharson foi uma individualidade muito importante para a história da Escócia. Pertencente ao clã MacIntosh devido ao seu casamento com o chefe deste clã, Lady Anne foi uma rebelde na guerra civil que perturbava a união da nação. Esta era jacobita e lutava em nome do seu rei, por paixão ao seu país e à sua nacionalidade e a favor da preservação da individualidade da sua terra.
Cedo esta jovem se tornou uma das mulheres mais conhecidas das Highlands e foi uma autêntica inspiração para as gerações vindouras. Um trabalho que denota uma pesquisa imensa e cuidada, A Rosa Rebelde, tem tudo para se destacar de qualquer outro romance histórico.

Durante vários anos que esta obra me passou despercebida, por várias razões. A primeira é ter a perfeita noção de que não é um livro que faça parte dos tops de vendas e portanto a sua visibilidade torna-se proporcionalmente menor. A segunda é o facto de eu não me aventurar muito neste género, a não ser mais recentemente, obrigando-me a sair fora da minha zona de conforto e a ser várias vezes surpreendida. Aquando comecei a fazer uma pesquisa mais aprofundada de romances históricos, descobri a autora Janet Paisley que além de ter escrito A Rosa Rebelde tem outro livro que me interessa bastante, intitulado Warrior Daughter. No entanto, como apenas o primeiro se encontra publicado em Portugal, a minha hipótese para experimentar a autora foi decidida automaticamente. Dentro da pesquisa que fiz, também me apercebi que esta obra tinha várias opiniões muito positivas e portanto o meu entusiasmo acabou por crescer.
Acabei por criar algumas expectativas para este livro, devido aos elogios fantásticos que descobri sobre a obra. Tanto pode ser uma influência boa quanto má, todos nós sabemos isso, por isso é que não gosto muito de ler opiniões antes de ler um livro, porque acabo inadvertidamente por ser influenciada nalguns casos. Mas, a curiosidade matou o gato e por isso mesmo, posso dizer que ainda não aprendi a minha lição.

Verdade seja dita, nunca esperei que este livro me pudesse vir alguma vez a decepcionar, isto porque eu gosto particularmente de romances históricos com grande ênfase nos factos históricos e para mim é fundamental que o autor faça uma pesquisa abrangente e cuidada, mesmo que depois acabe por ficcionar vários elementos na confecção da sua obra. E A Rosa Rebelde acabaria por me surpreender exactamente por isso.

A autora tem uma escrita muito fácil de acompanhar e este foi um dos factores que mais me admirou nesta leitura. Mal comecei a ler, senti uma fluidez muito dinâmica na sua narrativa e facilmente li metade do livro em apenas um fôlego. Considero isto um ponto muito positivo, porque demonstra que a autora sabe apresentar factos históricos e uma grande quantidade de informações sem se tornar de alguma forma aborrecida.
Além da sua escrita fabulosa, temos a questão da pesquisa que foi necessária para criar este enredo e as características deste romance histórico e nisto, também a autora se demonstra incansável. Nota-se perfeitamente, em todo o decorrer da obra que a autora fez uma pesquisa cuidada e soube seleccionar os elementos que quis incluir no seu livro de forma acertada.

Contudo, o enredo em si não me entusiasmou sobremaneira. Creio que a autora lhe deu pouco movimento, até mesmo nas cenas de batalha. As descrições dos cenários e das batalhas pareceram-me pouco dinâmicas, pouco intensas. Afinal é suposto imprimir intensidade pois a guerra é sempre um misto grande de sensações e emoções fortes. No entanto, não senti nada disso nesta situação e acabei por perder um pouco o entusiasmo. Além disso, senti que grande parte do livro se destina a descrever o quotidiano do clã e de estratégia de guerra, mas pouco mais avança. Tem um enredo muito estático e acabei por não perceber qual seria o objectivo concreto da autora - se explicar o quotidiano dos clãs que lutaram contra a união da nação ou mostrar o ambiente da época, com as suas batalhas mas igualmente demonstrar a vida da nossa protagonista, especialmente o seu casamento com o chefe do clã MacIntosh. Acabei por ficar bastante desiluda com a vertente romântica deste romance, acho que a autora não conseguiu misturar bem os dois elementos e querendo manter-se o mais factual possível não conseguiu trazer intensidade nem beleza ao romance entre os dois protagonistas. Infelizmente, a forma como a autora me apresentou esta Lady Anne não teve sucesso algum. Não gostei da heroína, nem do seu carácter rebelde. Pareceu-me sempre demasiado inconsequente e precipitada para quem é supostamente famosa por ser uma grande estrategista de guerra sem contar com o seu mau-feitio e não saber pensar pela própria cabeça e ter os seus próprios pensamentos.
Não confiar no próprio marido e tirar conclusões precipitadas não são características positivas em qualquer circunstâncias, mas para uma mulher que era supostamente rebelde e corajosa e um exemplo para o público feminino das Highlands, bem... deixa grandemente a desejar.

Contudo, tenho que confessar que nas últimas 20 páginas a autora me deu uma razão para sorrir e por isso mesmo, naquela altura não fiquei tão mal impressionada como parecia até ali. Os pontos positivos vão para a escrita, narrativa e descrições do cenário bem como a pesquisa efectuada. Os negativos vão para a construção de personagens e para a falta de dinamismo do enredo, bem como a construção do romance.
No final, o que fica é uma imagem positiva mas manterei um pé atrás, sem inspirar demasiada confiança.
Profile Image for Krista.
259 reviews35 followers
December 9, 2017
This is a fictional story about Anne Farquharson, wife of the chief of Clan McIntosh and the Clan Chattan federation, who joined the Jacobite Uprising of 1745 after her husband went over to the enemy’s side (Hanoverian government) as a Black Watch captain. She rallied hundreds of her clansmen to the Jacobite cause under Alexander McGillivray’s command, and with her passion and dedication to the rebellion, earned herself the moniker “Colonel Anne”.

It is interesting how the author expounded on the treatment of Scottish and English women in this period, with the Scottish women enjoying more privileges than the English. Scottish women, particularly women from the Highlands, were regarded with respect and equality within their clan, and were authorized to own properties, marry out of free will, and file a divorce in accordance to their laws. They were also given a voice on important tribal decisions, and led their own clan if their kinsmen approved. Scottish men honored their women and children, and considered them important and indispensable to clan prosperity. It was like looking over the same civil liberties that our women ancestors had enjoyed before the Spaniards colonized us in the 16th century and introduced us to the more repressive custom of a feudal and patriarchal society.

I’ve actually first known Colonel Anne from a book by Marsha Canham (Midnight Honor). While both Janet Paisley and Canham regarded their books as a fictional representation of real persons and/or events, and shared the same description of Colonel Anne as a free-spirited and brave heroine, I think Paisley went a little over the top when she has suggested in this novel that Colonel Anne was a sexually-liberated woman and deliberately strayed from her marriage bed. Unless she had proof, I don’t think it’s necessary for the author to weave unfounded ideas (i.e. Colonel Anne’s infidelity and her casual attitude towards sex) so that she could flesh out titillating scenes in the waterfall or the bedroom or wherever her characters’ lust take them and show her characters’ romantic interludes in the midst of an ugly war. She even made Colonel Anne promise an ex-loverthat she will take him again to her bed if her husband does not please her. To be fair, Paisley did a little explanation of the old Celtic ways that do not condone “friendship of the thighs” and that most Highlander women in that period had tolerated, although in my opinion, too much of Colonel Anne’s musings about her sensuality and pleasure-seeking ways has somewhat eclipsed the historical points of the story. And if Anne’s purported relationship with another man isn’t true, then I personally think this story is a sad defamation to her good memory.

On another hand, I commend the author's heartbreaking retelling of the Battle of Culloden. Such a tragic display of lives lost and the death of a rich culture.
Profile Image for Erin.
3,951 reviews464 followers
August 8, 2025
This book was unbelievably good! First off, the female character is very strong-willed and totally flawed. There are so many times I wanted to shake her but yet I understood her passion and loyalty to her country, her clan, and to the two men that wage war on her heart. The battle of Culloden itself was described so vividly that I felt like I was there watching it all take place. The author does not hold back on the details and the viciousness of Cumberland's wrath.
820 reviews22 followers
February 17, 2022
Absolutely loved this book!! I'd never heard of Ann Farquharson (aka the female Braveheart) and I'd love to learn more. Set in 1745, it takes place after the "union" between Scotland and England, which has resulted in a loss of land, rights, and customs as the English basically clamp down on Scotland particularly the Highlanders. In Ann's Scotland, woman not only have equal rights, they lead armies, and head households and hold titles that are limited to men in England. Ann is smart and feisty and a supporter of Prince Charlie, who is currently across the sea in France. The prince's father was once king of England, Ireland and Scotland, and the Prince wants the same for himself. The Scots only want to have self rule again with the Prince as their king. It doesn't help that there are conflicting goals between the Prince and those he hopes to rule, and when he lands in Scotland with only 7 men rather than the French army as expected, the country is disappointed. Ann is among many others who raise and army and to everyone surprise they are amazingly successful. Ann's husband, however, is on the other side as he balances loyalty to his country and to his tenants and those people is responsible for. Add a shared childhood friend of both Ann and her husband and you have an interesting situation, to say the least.

The book is well researched, well written and fast paced. I highly recommend it!
August 27, 2018
Adorei a parte sobre a história da Escócia, mais propriamente no que diz respeito às mulheres. Não conhecia tal avanço nas mentalidades naquela época. E fiquei muito surpreendida pela liberdade que lhes era concedida.
A parte das batalhas é sempre sangrenta e a autora muito rica em detalhes. O que não surpreende pois a sua escrita é extremamente descritiva.
O fim não me agrada mas a autora é fiel ao rumo histórico do que sucedeu na realidade. Recrutamento mundo a leitura mas certamente num fim de semana invernoso.
Profile Image for karen.
301 reviews
June 30, 2015
Wishing I liked it more.....but I just didn't. I was initially quite enthusiastic to read about the character, Anne, despite the bodice-ripper book cover, due to the Scottish setting, but had a hard time finishing this. As another reviewer wrote, it was difficult not to compare to the Highlander series and what caused me to stall out with the Highlander books was a big problem with this book as well, and that was the inclusion of unnecessarily graphic sex scenes. And again, I'm not a prude at all, but the gratuitous business is just tacky. It actually detracts from quality writing, from character development and a well-conceived plot. A good author knows to leave something to the reader's imagination; love/sex scenes don't have to be choreographed to every lick and tweak and thrust...you get it, just unnecessary. Unless you are an author who is seriously trying to write porn.

The writing also dragged turgidly throughout the historic re-caps, worse than a high school history text. The Jacobite rebellion is so extensively chronicled so masterfully in so many sources, to have attempted to sell the nut-shell Readers' Digest version to readers was just a losing battle. And boring as all get out.

Another huge detraction for me with this book was the sporadic insertion of Scottish Gaelic words and phrases. As a student of the Gaelic language, I just found this annoying and uncalled for, especially since it wasn't done especially accurately. If I wanted to read a book written in French, Spanish, German, or Gaelic, etc, I would have chosen a book written in those languages. When an author intersperses an English text with foreign language blurbs, I have to wonder at the motivation. I mean, are the inserts integral to the plot? Rarely. Are they supposed to make the readers feel like they're having a more authentic experience? Doesn't make sense if the readers aren't familiar with the language being bandied about. Or is the author trying to show off how much they've really truly researched their topic? Who knows? Who cares? And how many readers are out there who can even pronounce the Gaelic words, were they spelled correctly in the first place?

While this was a tale worth telling, this particular telling of it fell flat for me.
Profile Image for Erin.
129 reviews14 followers
April 24, 2010
White Rose Rebel is the fictionalized story of Colonel Anne Farquarhson. As stated at the end of the novel, Colonel Anne was a real woman but little is known of her precise role during the Scottish uprising of 1745. I'm giving this story 4 stars based solely upon the historical nature of the writing. It was interesting to read an account of this time period based upon a woman's point of view. It was also fascinating to learn about Scottish women's rights and the important role they played within the clan society.

If I was basing my rating upon the characters and how I felt about them, I'd probably give it 3 stars. There was little character development and there seemed to be very little emotional development between the two main characters of the book. I honestly didn't care whether or not their relationship status was ever repaired. Also, there were seemingly hundreds of other people, whether mentioned in passing or occasionally popping up every ten chapters or so, that were nearly impossible to keep track of. I found myself flipping back in the book to figure out who this or that person was. Eventually I just stopped, because it was too time consuming.
Profile Image for Rachel.
158 reviews27 followers
January 22, 2011
For the sake of full disclosure, I should point out that I stopped reading 3/4 of the way through the book. Life is too short to read something you don't like.

The premise is intriguing- the Jacobite rebellion, a female Braveheart, a love story...

But the excitement I expected never really appeared. Yes, there were battles, described rather gruesomely, and yes, there was something resembling a love story (Remember, self- heroines described as "fiery," "tempestuous," and "independent-minded" means that the author is going to tell us far more about the woman's sex life than I find interesting. And it also usually means she cheats on her husband.), but as a general whole the book was... boring.

It was like there were three different stories: one of battles and war, one of politics and intrigue, and one of Colonel Anne's love life- yet none of the stories held enough weight as a novel alone, so they were cobbled together into a novel that is less than impressive.
Profile Image for Mariana.
711 reviews28 followers
November 12, 2013
Na verdade, é mais 3,5 estrelas.

O livro tem alguns aspetos negativos:
- Existem demasiados nomes de clãs e chefes de clãs e tornou-se algo confuso perceber sempre quem era quem ou qual era qual;
- Algumas das expressões gaélicas que a autora utilizou não constavam do glossário inicial, pelo que fiquei sem perceber o que significavam


E bastantes positivos:

- Ler esta história é uma verdadeira lição de História sobre a cultura escocesa do séc. XVIII; ficamos a saber imensas coisas sobre os clãs das Terras Altas, sobre a sociedade escocesa e sobre a sua luta pela defesa da sua liberdade;
- Os protagonistas são personagens interessantes e bem desenvolvidas;
- O desenrolar da ação, um pouco lento de início, a partir de determinada altura torna-se inebriante e leva-nos a devorar o livro até à última página.

Concluindo, um livro que recomendo aos amantes de romances históricos com personagens e histórias verídicas.
Profile Image for Mary.
649 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2012
White Rose Rebel is a brilliant historical fiction account of Colonel Anne, la belle rebelle, a Scottish warrior-woman who led her clan in the Jacobite rising of 1745. Colonel Anne's husband fought for the government, and as the civil war divided the country, so it divided their marriage. A realistic love story with complex, well-written characters, and a page-turning, emotional adventure throughout the battles of Prestonpans, Falkirk, and Culloden. Highly recommended, esp. for lovers of Scottish history.

ETA: I loved this book so much that I listened to the audio version right away. Carolyn Bonnyman does a terrific job narrating, and it was wonderful to hear the Gaelic pronunciations. Also highly recommended.
99 reviews
May 24, 2011
As a McIntosh, and having just stayed at Glentruim, the historic home of one of the clan chieftains of McPherson - same clan as McIntosh (Clan Chattan), I was anxious to read this book. Don't bother. The writing is trite and simplistic. The plot is as cliche as most bad romance novels. I was highly disappointed in the quality of the writing and the lack of attention to historical accuracy.
Profile Image for A B.
1,382 reviews16 followers
May 15, 2020

Eureka moment whilst reading this book: so THAT's the origin of Black Watch plaid. Dang, I feel like a bonehead. I'd always figured it was inspired by the plaid watchband of a, um, black watch.

I didn't have high hopes for this book, primarily because the Third Uprising/tragedy of Culloden is such a saturated subgenre of historical fiction. It's not like we don't know how it's going to end. We are just going to read - again - about the annihilation of the Highland life and culture. So I was pleasantly surprised at how this book maintained my interest. It is readable, not necessarily entertaining, but does a good job with character dialogue and action scenes. I liked the portrayal of Bonnie Prince Charlie as a perhaps more historically accurate character who saw his Scottish birthright as a path to the English crown.

Aeneas was a refreshing character for this subgenre - a highland chief who chooses to side with the English as a long-term strategy to save his clan. It's presented in a way that shows it was an honorable decision. This prompted interesting plot development as his wife quite literally rides off into the sunset as soon as he announces that he allied with the English.

And that's the problem: Anne sucks.

If it weren't for Aeneas and other good points, this would be a 1 star because she's just so awful.

We meet her as a teenager, where she gleefully kills a stag and injures herself trying to beat her friend/future f*ckbuddy, Alexander, to the kill. Her carelessness means she has to wait in the woods while he gets help. So naturally, she doesn't stay put and encounters wolves. Aeneas saves her life, which she thanks him for by kicking him. Then she later berates Alexander for not getting to her in time. I think we're supposed to find this refreshing, that she's bold! independent! not tied to a man! blah blah blah another Mary Sue.

She doesn't get better. Alexander loves her, even with the apparent casual sex and relationships of the Highland clans (which I am not quite sure is accurate). She breaks his heart when she decides to marry Aeneas after they apparently encounter each other again and have some mad passionate stare that prompts him to propose marriage. Yes, really. Her loyalty to Aeneas stops the minute he sides with the English, and then she's suddenly this badass military strategist and commander.

If you can set Anne's awfulness aside, it's a pretty good book.

Profile Image for Fergie.
430 reviews42 followers
June 13, 2017
3 1/2 - 4 stars

I bought this book years ago only to rediscover it recently. Being a fan of the Outlander books and television series, I had some previous knowledge and understanding of the Scottish Highlander Rising of 1745. While I didn't find this book nearly as captivating as Diana Gabaldon's Outlander story, I felt Janet Paisley did a more than adequate job at keeping me engaged while staying true to the historical record.

The book was marketed as 'the true story of the female Braveheart'. Lady Anne Farquharson-MacKintosh chose to side with her people when they raised arms against their English oppressors. What made this fact more astounding was that she did so in direct defiance of her Scottish husband, who chose to remain loyal to the Union. This is her story.

This book was fascinating enough for me to pique my interest in reading more about the real life Scottish heroine.
Profile Image for Alexa Znih.
16 reviews3 followers
June 10, 2018
Ich ziehe meinen Hut vor Janet Paisley und Ihrer Geschichte über Anne, Schottland und dessen Geschichte.
Da ich ein Schottland Fan seit jeher bin, musste mir dieses Buch irgendwann in die Händen fallen.
Es ist die Geschichte über eine Frau, die für ihre Werte, ihr Land und für Gerechtigkeit kämpfte und das gegen die Liebe und vor allem ohne an die Konsequenzen zu denken.
Es ist eine Geschichte über die Gleichberechtigung, Schuld und Missverständnisse, die auf dem Schlachtfeld und in einer Ehe ausgetragen wurden.
Die Protagonisten besticht durch ihre Geradlinigkeit, sie lässt Gefühle zu und schämt sich dieser nicht und das in einer Zeit, wo Frauen weniger Wert waren. Nicht jedoch in Schottland, einem Land das für Gleichberechtigung, Familiensinn und Tradition steht, damals und heute.
Für alle die eine aufregende Geschichte, eine Liebesgeschichte, Drama und Wahrheit lesen wollen ist dies eine spannende und einfühlsame Lektüre.
48 reviews1 follower
June 24, 2021
White Rose Rebel is a well-researched book, told primarily from a woman’s point of view. Three aspects of the major characters’ lives (war, politics, and love) are beautifully woven together to create an emotional adventure. The love triangle between Aeneas, Anne, and MacGillivray is realistic and heart-breaking.
I loved how the English were portrayed as barbarians while the Scottish were forward thinking and civilised, particularly in how they treat their women.
I liked how the story continued well past Culloden. Many books in this kind of setting use Culloden as either a starting or ending point. It was nice to see how such a major event changed things. That being said, I’m a tad disappointed that neither Anne nor Aeneas was actually at Culloden during the battle.

Check out the full review at www.travellingbooknerd.com/white-rose...
Profile Image for H.A..
Author 3 books5 followers
March 26, 2023
Was I excited for female braveheart, Boudicca type story based on true events?! Yes, was I let down and disappointed, sadly also yes. I had such high hopes for this one it sounded right up my alley but the execution was considerably lacking. So instead of passionate romance with electrical chemistry-you get cheap sex scenes which come off a bit tacky. If you love spice they’re great with lots of detail but for me I need that intellectual fire alongside the spice for it to have that impact. The rest of the book was pretty boring and lacklustre I didn’t care about the characters or what was going on in general. Nothing was making me really feel, it was just plodding along. The battle scenes were gory and realistically detailed which was good but got a bit tedious for me. It was a dnf about 50% in.
436 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2021
My only complaint about the novel is the TMI on the sex scenes - gratuitous titillation ! Otherwise it's a well written, mainly correct factually and an historically accurate evaluation of the attitude to Scotland & the Scots by the majority of the remainder of the UK population, both then & now.

Scotland needed to be independent, but would the Bonnie Prince have given Scotland it's independence & her women their equality back ? Doubtful as he was only looking to his & his fathers futures as rulers of a united Britain, not Scottish independence from the union.

Anne & many other women who fought for Scottish independence through the ages need their stories to be written by someone like Janet, & not just from Anne's era.

Profile Image for Saff.
123 reviews
December 23, 2019
One of my favourite historical fiction books. I have read it multiple times and it never fails to delight. Set in the '45 Jacobite uprising, it tells the story of the Colonel Anne Farquharson, who defies her husband and the entire English army by leading the clans out for the Bonnie Prince. The story is written well, the characters are complex and beautifully defined, I love the change in perspective as we go along, as well as the strong female characters. Paisley does a fantastic job of placing the reader solidly in the highlands and allowing us to immerse ourselves in clan culture and life. Definitely a treat.
1 review
November 16, 2024
It started off well and hooked me in, but the graphic rape scenes were awful and I had to skip to the end to find out what happened because I couldn't stand it. One of them was so awful it's still with me days later. I don't know why there's a trend of female authors writing graphic rape into their Scottish historical fiction but it's ruining reading for me.

Besides that I enjoyed the story and the characters, although at some point it felt like their development was a little confusing - but it's a big story to tell so you can't do it all I guess. It's a shame because the rape ruined a book that had me hooked initially.
39 reviews
January 11, 2025
Een historische roman die speelt in Schotland in de 18de eeuw. Het vertelt het verhaal van Anne Farquharson die trouwt met het clanhoofd van clan Mackintosh/Chatton en tijdens de veldslagen van "the young pretender"/Bonnie Prince Charlie tegenover haar man komt te staan. Minder romantiek dan verwacht (ik dacht, gewoon een kasteelromannetje), maar de nadruk ligt op de politieke en maatschappelijke ontwikkelingen in die tijd (ca.1725-1750). Anne Farquharson heeft echt bestaan en dit boek was voor mij de aanzet om wat meer over deze periode te willen weten, hetgeen ik altijd een pluspunt vind als een boek daarvan de oorzaak is.
Profile Image for Elise.
233 reviews
December 11, 2018
Probably not for everybody but I can't help being completely engrossed by stories about Bonnie Prince Charlie (aka one of my favourite historical figures). Learning more about the treatment of Highlanders during this time was also interesting.
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