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The Queen of Subtleties: A Novel of Anne Boleyn

AUTHOR: Suzannah Dunn
ISBN: 0060591579

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         Editorial Review

The Queen of Subtleties: A Novel of Anne Boleyn
- Book Review,
by Suzannah Dunn


From Publishers Weekly
Fans of historical fiction will savor this colorful retelling of the rise and fall of Anne Boleyn by British author Dunn. The novel (her eighth, and the first to be published in the U.S.) is narrated in turns by Anne, now imprisoned in the Tower, and Lucy Cornwallis, Henry VIII's confectioner, who observes the dramas of the court from the haven of her kitchen. Though their paths seldom cross, the two women's lives become fatefully linked through the scandalous liaisons of the English court. On the eve of her beheading, Anne documents her life's tale for her young daughter, Elizabeth, telling how she came to join the king's court as a lady-in-waiting to Henry's first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and caught the eye of the king. Ambitious and proud, she refuses to be his mistress, insisting instead on becoming his legitimate wife. Henry eventually succumbs to her pressures, but only after he breaks with Rome and declares himself the head of the Church of England. Meanwhile, Lucy falls desperately in love with Mark Smeaton, the angelic court musician who in turn is enamored with Anne. This reasonably accurate historical portrait of Anne is enlivened by Dunn's imaginative weaving of Lucy into the narrative, making for a delicious romp through the romance, politics and drama of 16th-century England. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com
Novelists and dramatists have long been drawn to the story of Henry VIII and his six unfortunate wives. No wonder. It's got the lot: intrigue, passion, high policy. Because its consequences were so severe, and its issue so significant, Henry's second marriage, to Anne Boleyn, is the one that has inspired the most retellings. The tale is gripping. A king, grown weary of the state marriage contracted in his youth and longing for the male heir that his aging queen cannot provide, turns to a dark-eyed English beauty with whose sister he has already sired a son. But Anne Boleyn, unlike her sister, will not settle for the role of mistress, and the monarch must refashion the very fabric of his realm to accommodate his desire and her ambition. Yet when he has severed ties with Rome, reformed the church in England, sent many to their deaths and finally married, he tires of his bride within three years and has her beheaded on unlikely counts of adultery. Fascinating as it is, this story is well-known to the point of triteness. A writer needs a compelling slant or a new vision to justify adding to the groaning piles of fiction already lying thick on this well-trodden ground. British author Suzannah Dunn attempts an original approach in The Queen of Subtleties, her first novel to be published in the United States. She employs two narrators: Anne Boleyn, awaiting execution and writing the story of her life to be read at a later date by her daughter Elizabeth; and Lucy Cornwallis, the king's confectioner and creator of the sculpted sugar "subtleties" that provide centerpieces at court feasts and tempt the monarch's famous appetite. This is a promising structure, and the voices are pleasantly various. Anne Boleyn, of course, is entirely self-serving in her account of her own rise and downfall. Lucy Cornwallis is an unbiased source, a kind of below-stairs Everywoman, who remains loyal to the spurned Queen Catherine while admiring aspects of Anne's strong personality and pitying her eventual plight. Dunn has created Lucy Cornwallis from a mere name -- the only female name in the lists of the royal household's 200 kitchen staff -- and does a good job of evoking her tradeswoman's pride in her unusual craft. Her story, alas, just does not have the heft of Anne Boleyn's, and the lives of the two women intersect in only a most contrived way. Lucy falls for Mark Smeaton, the new queen's musician, and believes her affections returned. In fact, young Smeaton is infatuated with the queen and sees Lucy only as a safe and caring older confidante. This misunderstanding is poignantly rendered from the disappointed woman's point of view. Smeaton ultimately suffers for raising his eyes above the kitchen by being accused -- and executed -- as one of the queen's partners in adultery. While the voices of Anne and Lucy alternate, they narrate from different points in time, so that the effect is often a jarring distraction as the reader is forced to reorient within the story. For example, Lucy's account of the night of Catherine's death comes almost a hundred pages before Anne's account of the same event. In between, the narratives weave back and forth, with Catherine long-buried one minute and very much alive the next. Dunn has written seven previous books of contemporary fiction. This is her first venture into a historical subject, and she has made the rather odd decision to retain modern idiom and give not the slightest nod toward the rich language of Tudor times. To me, this is an opportunity lost, and it undoes much of the good work done elsewhere in creating a sense of the court, the kitchens and the royal barges. Much of the pleasure of historical fiction comes from how well the author evokes the strangeness of another time and place, and Dunn has sacrificed this. Henry has a "crush" on Anne; he wants his courtiers to "skedaddle." It is not as if the authentic documents on which she could have drawn are written in Chaucerian Middle English. Her period is just a half-century removed from Shakespeare; her royal protagonist, Henry, wrote songs that are still in the repertoire of modern schoolchildren. Our ear is attuned to the speech of the period and accustomed to enjoying it. Worse, Dunn deliberately fictionalizes where fact is far more engaging. In 1526, at the height of his unrequited passion for Anne, Henry appeared in a jousting costume embroidered with the words "Declare je nos," which translates as "Declare I dare not." For no good reason Dunn makes the motto "No Comment." Elsewhere, she changes the name of Anne's dog, called "Perky" from the French "pourquois" because of his quizzical expression, to the bland and uninteresting "Pixie." The Queen of Subtleties offers certain satisfactions for those who find this story and period compelling. But by deciding to deprive herself of so many aids to authenticity, Dunn has failed to create as subtle a confection as she might have. Reviewed by Geraldine Brooks Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.


From Booklist
This fictional retelling of the triumphant rise and tragic downfall of Anne Boleyn rings true, reminding readers that great events are often viewed differently through the personal prisms of both participants and observers. Juxtaposing Anne's chronicle--written in prison as she awaits execution--with the recollections of Lucy Cornwallis, the king's talented confectioner, responsible for providing the insatiable Henry with an enormous variety of sweetly delectable concoctions, two divergent views of both the doomed queen and the historical circumstances surrounding her demise are provided. Presenting herself more as a victim than a villain, Anne, in her seemingly straightforward defense of her actions, lacks the objectivity and ultimate subtlety of Lucy's more balanced account. Since both women are products of their particular time in history and station in society, each brings a refreshingly unique perspective to a familiar tale. The authentically detailed narrative resonates with compassionate sympathy for the major players in this historical melodrama. Margaret Flanagan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Fort Worth Star-Telegram
"Dunn’s Boleyn is lusty, willful, ambitious and ultimately likable."


Kirkus Reviews
A lively reminder of the perils of marrying kings and princes, however glam the bride.


Kirkus Reviews
"A lively reminder of the perils of marrying kings and princes, however glam the bride."


Book Description

She was the dark-eyed commoner who captivated a king, causing a monumental upheaval in the land that would sever England from the rest of the Western world. Yet, after three short years of marriage, she would die by the headsman's sword, leaving behind a young daughter destined to rule as the greatest of all British monarchs. She was enchantress and martyr, manipulator and pawn, a complex, misunderstood mélange of subtlety and fire. Her name was Anne Boleyn.

With stunning vividness and lyrical power, author Suzannah Dunn brings a tumultuous era to magnificent life, as she boldly reimagines the rise and descent of a tragic, legendary queen, the second and perhaps most famous wife of King Henry VIII. It is a story of betrayal and love, of pomp and obsession, told in two unforgettable alternating voices: that of the doomed queen herself, relating the true and twisted circumstances of her triumphs, downfall, and impending death to the innocent child who will never truly know her mother ... and that of a servant, Lucy Cornwallis, witness to great and terrible events from her place in the royal kitchens. These two women -- both serving at the whim of a volatile monarch, both prisoners in a world of power and unspeakable cruelty -- share nothing except an inside view of the intricate workings of a merciless court ... and an ultimately devastating relationship with a handsome, young musician.

With wit, grace, and masterful storytelling, Suzannah Dunn weaves a compelling and unforgettable tale rich in color and detail, peopled with larger-than-life characters rendered poignantly and painfully human by an artist's expert hand. The Queen of Subtleties is a magnificent achievement -- a masterwork that will live long and stand regally proud among the most loved and respected works of historical fiction.


About the Author
Suzannah Dunn is the author of seven previous works of fiction, all critically acclaimed and well received in the U.K. The Queen of Subtleties is her first novel to be published in the United States. She lives in Brighton, England.


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         Book Review

The Queen of Subtleties: A Novel of Anne Boleyn
- Book Reviews,
by Suzannah Dunn

The Queen of Subtleties: A Novel of Anne Boleyn

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"She was the dark-eyed commoner who captivated a king, causing a monumental upheaval in the land that would sever England from the rest of the Western world. Yet, after three short years of marriage, she would die by the headsman's sword, leaving behind a young daughter destined to rule as the greatest of all British monarchs. She was enchantress and martyr, manipulator and pawn, a complex, misunderstood melange of subtlety and fire. Her name was Anne Boleyn." Author Suzannah Dunn brings a tumultuous era to life, as she reimagines the rise and descent of a tragic, legendary queen, the second and perhaps most famous wife of King Henry VIII. It is a story of betrayal and love, of pomp and obsession, told in two unforgettable alternating voices : that of the doomed queen herself, relating the true and twisted circumstances of her triumphs, downfall, and impending death to the innocent child who will never truly know her mother...and that of a servant, Lucy Cornwallis, witness to great and terrible events from her place in the royal kitchens. These two women - both serving at the whim of a volatile monarch, both prisoners in a world of power and unspeakable cruelty - share nothing except an inside view of the intricate workings of a merciless court...and an ultimately devastating relationship with a handsome, young musician.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Fans of historical fiction will savor this colorful retelling of the rise and fall of Anne Boleyn by British author Dunn. The novel (her eighth, and the first to be published in the U.S.) is narrated in turns by Anne, now imprisoned in the Tower, and Lucy Cornwallis, Henry VIII's confectioner, who observes the dramas of the court from the haven of her kitchen. Though their paths seldom cross, the two women's lives become fatefully linked through the scandalous liaisons of the English court. On the eve of her beheading, Anne documents her life's tale for her young daughter, Elizabeth, telling how she came to join the king's court as a lady-in-waiting to Henry's first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and caught the eye of the king. Ambitious and proud, she refuses to be his mistress, insisting instead on becoming his legitimate wife. Henry eventually succumbs to her pressures, but only after he breaks with Rome and declares himself the head of the Church of England. Meanwhile, Lucy falls desperately in love with Mark Smeaton, the angelic court musician who in turn is enamored with Anne. This reasonably accurate historical portrait of Anne is enlivened by Dunn's imaginative weaving of Lucy into the narrative, making for a delicious romp through the romance, politics and drama of 16th-century England. Agent, Antony Topping. (Oct.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In her U.S. debut, British author Dunn imbues the story of the notorious Tudor queen Anne Boleyn with new life. The story is narrated in alternating chapters by Anne Boleyn and Lucy Cornwallis, confectioner to King Henry VIII. Lucy, who makes "subtleties" and grand sugar centerpieces for feasts and banquets, is taken aback when Mark Smeaton, musician of the queen, begins to pay her visits. What is given in friendship Lucy mistakes for love, and she is devastated when Mark is sentenced to death for committing adultery with the queen. The voice of Anne Boleyn is spot-on. Clever and brash, she uses colorful language not often associated with the image of a king's better half. Dunn also makes Lucy's growing love and eventual heartbreak palpable. One is struck by the similarities between the two women, even though their lives are worlds apart. Recommended for most historical fiction collections. [For other novels about the tragic queen, see Robyn Maxwell's The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn and Philippa Gregory's The Other Boleyn Girl. Ed.] Anna M. Nelson, Seabrook Lib., NH Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

British author Dunn, author of seven previous novels, debuts in the US with a lively and contemporary-flavored take on a royal wife who, like Princess Diana, made enemies in high places. The story of Anne Boleyn, the woman whose love for a King changed the way England worshipped-at a price.-is told in alternate chapters by Anne and Lucy Cornwallis, the King's confectioner. Anne, a prisoner in the Tower and about to be executed on trumped-up charges of adultery-Henry wants to marry Jane Seymour, hoping she will bear him a son-is writing her memoirs for her daughter, the young Princess Elizabeth. While Anne's account is somewhat self-serving and defensive, Lucy's is merely that of an eyewitness to the unfolding events that she sees as she creates elaborate sugar confections for the court's banquets and festivals. Anne blames Henry's first wife, Catherine of Spain, for much of her trouble. A devout Catholic, Catherine refused to divorce Henry when he wanted to marry Anne and sire an heir. Initially reluctant to divorce a popular queen and offend Spain, Henry dragged his feet. But using guile and argument, and spending seven years in a legal limbo-she didn't marry until she was 32-Anne successfully persuaded Henry to act. Defying the pope, he made himself head of the Church and beheaded all those clergy and statesmen, including the famous Thomas More, who opposed him. Anne was triumphant, but not for long. Now, showing little introspection, she has no sorrow for Catherine or for her daughter Princess Mary, but merely recalls her brief happiness and then her downfall. Lucy notes that the people disliked Anne, disapproved of the marriage, and were angry with Henry's treatment of Catherine. Lucyalso recalls, sadly, how she herself fell in love with Mark Smeaton, a court musician, who, in love with Anne, paid dearly for his declaration of affection to her. A lively reminder of the perils of marrying kings and princes, however glam the bride. Agent: Antony Topping/Greene & Heaton


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