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All the Queen's Men

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Yet another chronicling of Elizabeth's reign, this keeps hold of the relationship, which changed through the years, between her and Lord Robert Dudley, later Earl of Leicester, and emphasizes the many other men over whom she kept absolute dominion. It allows for the mental despoiling of her innocence by the scandal, precipitated by the Lord Admiral, in her youth, the need then to escape traps, to indulge in precocious lies, and, her innocence affirmed, for the total shock of Seymour's death that made her a woman of icy calculation who did ""not want any human creature to partake in the power that was hers"". So that Dudley, rising from master of the horse, suspect of the murder of his wife, could never achieve his first desire of marrying Elizabeth, could only learn to follow her commands and earn her real devotion, whatever emotional and political shifts occurred. The long, deadly, cautious game that Elizabeth played with Mary, always to secure time from the French and the Spaniards; the formidable taming of adversaries -- as well as supporters, the parade of international and internal crises, the indomitable force that kept her the symbol the people needed -- these too are part of the portrait.

Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1960

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About the author

Evelyn Anthony

118 books96 followers
Evelyn Anthony was the pen name of Evelyn Bridgett Patricia Stephens Ward-Thomas,

Started her career as a writer of historical fiction, later switched to writing contemporary thrillers, often with an espionage theme.

She met Michael Ward-Thomas on a double date in The Dorchester and both were attracted to each other.] He worked for the Consolidated African Selection Trust. They switched partners and were married a few months later.

They bought Horham Hall in 1968 but found that it was costly and sold it in 1976 and moved to Naas, County Kildare where she had relatives. Increased income from her writing allowed her to buy Horham Hall back in 1982.

In 1994 she became High Sheriff of Essex, the firswt woman in over 700 years to hold this office.

In 1995 her daughter Kitty died of a heroin overdose, leading Evelyn to not write for another seven years.

In 2004 her husband died of a stroke.

She was survived by her children Susan, Anthony, Ewan, Christian and Luke as well as 16 grandchildren.

NB:Some sources give Ms Anthonys year of birth as 1926.

Additional information added from Wikipedia

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Vickie (I love books).
80 reviews28 followers
September 26, 2024
This was a strong depiction of queen Elizabeth. She was a strong queen who ruled with her head. It depicts queen Mary of Scotland as weak. She did have a lot of issues to deal with no true supporters save just a very few. Elizabeth ruled with a strong hand for her country whereas Mary wanted to be loved. It was a hard time for women. Stay single as Elizabeth did and you are constantly hammered to take a husband and make an heir. Mary took husbands and lost her throne because of it. She had an heir and never got to love him or be with him. Her brother was always against her. Queen Elizabeth our golden queen forever loved then and now.
12 reviews
June 16, 2016
Interesting

I've read many books about Queen Elizabeth I, some college reading materials as well. The movies made have followed the highs and some selfish lows of the late Queen. I enjoyed this take on her as her emotional upheavals were more known and makes her more personable in life. I will obviously continue to read the other books on her life and reign throughout my life just because she interests me greatly. I enjoy the authors different views based on their own personal beliefs. A definite must read for any lover of the Elizabethan era.
Profile Image for Jackleen.
287 reviews
April 1, 2017
I only noticed once I finished this book that it was published in 1960. As such, the straight forward story telling free of the modern tendency to prevarication on the lives these royal persons. It is very much a historical book with interesting character developments of Elizabeth Tutor, Robert Dudley, Mary Stuart and Philip of Spain and their internal and external struggles. Once I was accustomed to the dry writing form, I really enjoyed this book.
166 reviews
July 14, 2017
A very interesting read. I had trouble putting it down, even when I got so sleepy I could hardly see the page. I would love to see more like this one. She made the characters real and not just a picture in a museum. Well done.
Profile Image for HalKid2.
742 reviews
December 2, 2018
Over the years, I have read MANY historical novels by Evelyn Anthony but this is the first one I've picked up in perhaps 15 years. And what a treat! Awarded four stars on Goodreads.

First of all, there is a sophistication to Anthony's writing that few historical novelists match. Reading her narrative feels like you've traveled back in time. Her characters speak to each other differently than we do. More formally, but without being obscure or difficult to understand. And the consistency of this style helps keep the reader firmly placed in Tudor England.

Then, there is the exceptional way Anthony digs into the psychology of historic personalities. Figures like Queen Elizabeth I, her favorite Robert Dudley, Mary Queen of Scots, Mary's second husband Henry Stuart, Mary's third husband James Hepburn, Elizabeth's chief advisor William Cecil, Spain's King Phillip II, even Elizabeth's look-alike cousin Lettice Knollys (and Dudley's second wife) are thoughtful, subtle and fully three-dimensional human beings.

Each character's actions feel fully believable and natural -- because they are backed up by such rich detail and explanation on how each person interprets information and transforms it into distinctive motivations. (Anthony has a particularly unique and intriguing explanation of the infamous abduction and rape of Mary Queen of Scots by James Hepburn, Lord Bothwell.) I can't think of another historical novelist who matches Anthony for level of insight or provides her characters with more depth or more understandable flaws.

Though I already knew the facts and stories of this time period (from Elizabeth's ascension to the throne through the death of Robert Dudley), I came away feeling I truly understood why historical events unfolded as they did -- perhaps for the first time. Because they were simply reflections of the human beings involved in the events.
Like, for example:
• How supremely intelligent Elizabeth I was, when compared with most of her contemporaries, and what an advantage she made that.
• What it was about Lord Burghley that made him Elizabeth's most trusted advisor, and what his shortcomings were.
• Why Robert Dudley's romance with Elizabeth I was bound to be doomed, by his own foibles.
• And how Mary's (Queen of Scots) pampered upbringing in France made her unprepared to go up against Elizabeth and win.

If you love historical fiction as much as I do, or have a passion for Tudor England, don't miss this one.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews