3.5 stars
I didn't actually have plans to read this book at this exact moment, but as my library has decided that they will be discontinuing their Hoopla service at the end of the month, I moved it (and 2 other books) up in order to not lose access to it. (Of course, only later do I learn that my mom had it on Audible, which I can access through our linked accounts. DERP.)
Anyway. So, this book was not really what I expected. For one, I expected more... witchcraft. Or at least more accusations of witchcraft. But this was more multi-subject historical biography than anything, and the accusations of witchcraft there were only played into the political machinations of the time. But, really, I shouldn't be surprised about that, since that's pretty much what all witchcraft allegations were about - politics and power.
The interesting thing here is that these allegations were made in a very short period of time, and very specifically, and to four women who knew or were related to each other, all tied to the English throne in some way, and all used as political pawns in the civil wars in England over said throne.
Joan of Navarre, 1368 – 10 June 1437
Eleanor Cobham, 1400 – 7 July 1452
Jacquetta of Luxembourg, 1415 or 1416 – 30 May 1472
Elizabeth Woodville, 1437 – 8 June 1492
I quite enjoyed learning about these women and learning about this period of history. I can appreciate the amount of research that went into writing about their lives, and by Hollman's own account, it was quite difficult to find information on their childhoods, and certain periods of their lives. I very much appreciated the tone of the book, clearly showing them as human women who were raised and prepared for lives of high position, but not preternaturally cunning or malevolent. These were women who had to be in the public eye and who had a measure of power and authority and wealth, but at all times lived under the thumb of the throne and the church and the people. The ways that they handled the accusations and charges against them showed that they were intelligent and shrewd, but also that they were human and fallible and vulnerable, and no amount of power or intelligence can save you when the whole system is stacked against you.
This book has definitely inspired me to read more about this period, because what was here was interesting, but I also feel like I didn't really get a full picture of the political environment of the time, because with each new woman brought into the story, the history and perspective shifted a bit to make the history relevant to how it would have affected her specifically.
While I don't think this is necessarily a bad thing, and these women are the real focus, it did make it a bit confusing to follow the timelines and events when they would sometimes repeat and overlap in different perspective storylines. Perhaps this would have been easier to follow in print (maybe with genealogy maps or family trees? That would be nice.) but as I listened to the audiobook, I didn't have anything like that. My loss.
I also didn't love the audiobook reader for this one. While I appreciated the serious tone and respect for these women and this period of history, I felt like her cadence was a bit staccato and impersonal and almost cold. I don't know, I definitely wouldn't want someone sensationalizing or dramatizing the reading, but I also would have liked it to feel a bit more than like someone reading a list of statements.
Part of that is due to the writing itself though. The writing here was very tell-y. The sentences were short, direct, statement heavy, with a follow-up usually starting with 'however' or containing some type of adverb. For example: "Joan gave birth to at least 9 children. However, only 7 of them survived to adulthood." or "Moreover, Elizabeth would have understood her position at court." etc.
Once I noticed the adverbs, especially the trend of using 'however' to begin a sentence, I couldn't NOT hear it every time, and it was used frequently. I wish that would have been a little less prevalent, and that the writing was smoothed out a bit, but even as it was, the info that it conveyed was solid and interesting.
So, I liked this pretty well, and really liked the humanizing of women who generally are seen as evil, conniving, power-hungry seductresses. Honestly, listening to the lives these women led, I don't know if I could have done it. Sure, it would have been much easier at the time to have servants and nice things and fancy clothes and whatnot, but the pressure of being responsible for securing legitimacy of your husband's kingship by providing a male heir, and of likely being constantly pregnant sounds like the 9th circle of hell to me... so ALL of the kudos to these women for surviving that and not straight up murdering their husbands after finding out that they were pregnant for the 8th time or whatever.
I know I likely would have EARNED that prison time. Just saying. O_O