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Sharon Penman's sweeping, unforgettable novel vividly re-creates the dramatic life and times of Richard III, England's most controversial and colourful monarch. He was the last-born son of York and would become the last Plantagenet King of England. Born into an England ripped apart by the bloody and vicious Wars of the Roses, he was in awe of his eldest brother Edward, who snatched victory from the battlefield and claimed the crown for York. A man devoted to those he loved, Richard stayed loyal to his brother, forging a bond of blood that withstood war, treachery and even the malice of Edward's queen, Elizabeth. And loyal to Anne Neville, the daughter of the enemy, and the woman he adored with a passion that would last a lifetime. It was this loyalty that was his strength, and finally his undoing . . . The Sunne in Splendoursweeps away the myths to tell how one of the great sovereigns of England was betrayed by his allies, and then by history. But it is also the story of a man and his fight to win the woman he loves . . . Praise for Sharon Penman- 'The best kind of historical novel' Daily Telegraph 'A marvellous literary and historical achievement . . . impossible to put down' Boston Herald… (more)
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The Sunne in Splendour, by Sharon Kay Penman, follows the life of England's King Richard III. Penman painstakingly recreates the courts and
Penman masterfully recreates Richard's world. I'm not a historian - far from it - but from what I understand, Penman's scholarship is excellent. The story is always exciting, and Penman keeps the reader's interest high throughout the book. I think what she does best, though, is characterization. Each character comes alive in The Sunne in Splendour. Richard is extremely loyal to his brother, deeply in love with his wife, and has a strict moral sense - almost too strict. He is also too trusting of others, unwilling or unable to see what betrayal may lie ahead. Edward IV - Ned - is a larger-than-life character: handsome, brave, able to read people, politically astute, but in the end brought down by his excessive lifestyle. Richard's wife, Anne, is frail, devoted, intelligent, while Edward's wife, Elizabeth, is a beautiful viper, always scheming to ensure her family's position. Additionally, all of the other characters - and there are probably hundreds - are well-drawn and individual; Penman has taken the time to make each one come alive.
As the book came to an end, I found myself wishing that I didn't know what was going to happen. Penman does an excellent job of keeping the reader's interest high throughout the book, but as I got within the last 150 pages or so, I started reading slower and slower. However, I think in some ways Penman anticipates this. Once Richard had lost his son and his wife, the other characters in the book start worrying about whether he has the will to go on. I found that the story almost takes on the cast of a Shakespearean drama. Richard's "fatal flaws" begin to drive him - and the story - and each event seems to have the feeling of inevitability. I'm not sure if this is intentional: Is Penman is trying to counter Shakespeare's King Richard III in any way, or are the events that happen just so overwhelmingly tragic (in the traditional dramatic sense of the word) that any retelling will seem like, well, a Grand Tragedy?
This is an excellent book. Highly recommended.
In this story, we follow the fortunes of the Yorkists from Richard's early life when Edward moved to claim the throne from Harry of Lancaster. Richard is written to be an intensely loyal and clever man, beloved by his elder brother and honoured by many positions of authority. It is easy to develop a strong sympathy for the character of Richard, which lends understanding to why he would then claim the throne after his brother's death.
The book looks at the events of the time through many character's eyes - including Francis Lovell, Richard's friend from childhood; Anne, destined to become Richard's cherished wife; and Bess, the first-born daughter of Edward and Elizabeth Woodville.
The strongest element of Penman's writing is her ability to draw vivid and realistic characters. From the pleasure-seeking Edward to his ambitious and conniving queen; from the dignified Cecily who watched four sons be buried to the arrogant and self-seeking Buckingham. None of the characters can be assigned a 'good' or 'bad' tag - all have very believable motives assigned to them, and you end up feeling huge empathy for why they might act the way they do.
Although the book is a lengthy tome, I read it in under a week, drawn into a world where Richard is allowed to take his place as a man who cared deeply about his family and as a king who took the throne reluctantly. The last few hundred pages were heartbreaking as Buckingham sought to claim the crown for himself, and Richard was forced to experience the death of his nephews at someone else's command, then the illness and death of both his son and wife. When he eventually took to battle at Bosworth Field, he treated it as a trial by combat to be judged by God.
I think this is a stunning achievement, a book that should be read time and again. It was absorbing and extremely poignant - especially knowing the outcome prior to beginning the story.
He is such a controversial figure, and Penman admits as much in her Afterword when she writes about her sources and the difficulty of piecing together history five hundred years after the fact, and with mostly historical documents written from a nasty and biased Tudor victory. History can be so readily manipulated and taken out of context, so for Penman to both work with her sources honestly and create an incredibly readable novel out of them is no mean feat.
The figure of Richard which emerges in the Sunne in Splendour is admirable and human - not the corrupt hell-spawn that many readers know from Shakespeare's portrayal of the king. He is a noble if sometimes reluctant leader, and it is interesting to follow him through history (as it were) and see how the narrative becomes an apologetic for his actions. The princes in the tower, the death of Anne, his relationship with Bess - always his intentions are good, and the book makes clear that perhaps we shouldn't write off Richard as a psychopathic scoundrel but a rather more human and maligned historical figure than we typically consider him to be.
I think English history fans are split in the middle on the Richard III issue. Either he's the evil nephew-killing usurper or the loyal Yorkist saint. I lean toward the latter, though I don't believe he could
Penman obviously saw the brighter side of Richard III without leaving out his flaws; and although the book title refers to Edward IV, his brother is the focus. I was really drawn into the world of the last Plantagenets, for the first time actually. I sort of glossed over this period for the most part. Now I want to read everything I can find on the Wars of the Roses and the pre-Tudor period. I believe I've had a surfeit of Tudors for now - but I also get now why Henry VII and Henry VIII were a bit paranoid about their still living Plantagenet relatives.
Though I kind of felt dread toward the end of the book, knowing "Dickon" was doomed, I did enjoy the journey.
Penman has a writing style that literally had me hooked from the first sentence. A trite cliché, I know, but I was definitely drawn in from the first page. I knew in advance of reading the story what the outcome would be, but still I kept on reading to see what would happen. The novel is fiction based on fact that sometimes seems like fiction.
The characters are well drawn; and while the book is ostensibly about Richard, we get to see the story as seen through the eyes of others, which I thought was well done. Penman has a knack of really getting into her characters, no matter what the time period or where they come from, which is nothing short of genius. The author even gives a thoroughly believable explanation for Richard’s behavior with regard to his nephews, the Princes in the Tower, which was quite satisfying. And although the book is over 900 pages long, it only took me about a week to read; I was disappointed when I reached the last page. I can’t believe that, with my interest in historical fiction, it’s taken me this long to discover Sharon Kay Penman’s works.
“The Sunne in Splendor” is an historical novel of over 900 pages, spanning nearly the entire life of England’s Richard III, and it held my rapt attention for the entire book. In fact, I
Besides focusing on Richard III, “The Sunne in Splendor” tells the story of the War of the Roses, although primarily from the Yorkist perspective. From St. Albans to Bosworth Field, we are privy to the entire scope of this conflict, gaining along the way information about its origin.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about the successfully ambitious “The Sunne in Splendor” is that it was Penman’s first novel, written over 25 years ago. It has amazing depth both of information and of character for a first published novel.
Sad thing about “The Sunne in Splendor.” I was unable to put it down, particularly near the end, and I carried it into a restaurant my husband and I were in on a trip last weekend. After finishing the book, I set it down next to him on the windowsill to actually eat the food the waiter had brought to our table. Thirty or so minutes into our 45 minute drive back to where we were staying, we both realized that I had left the book on the table (thank goodness I had finished it!). It was a used copy anyway, but I would have liked to keep it. I guess it is time to add it to my BookMooch list and hope to obtain another copy.
Anyway, loved “The Sunne in Splendor” and Ms. Penman is now 2 for 2 with me (”The Devil’s Brood” was also fantastic), so I will be actively seeking out basically everything else she’s ever written.
Ms. Penman has gone to great lengths to make her novel as historically accurate as possible. She explains in the afterword how she would "not place a scene at Windsor [Castle:] unless my characters were known to be at Windsor on that day, making sure that a Wednesday was actually a Wednesday, that details of medieval life were corroborated by more than one source."
Richard III has not fared well at the hands of other writers - most·notably Shakespeare -and Ms. Penman believes that it was because the Tudors, who won the eventual battle for the throne, rewrote, as victors are wont to do, the history of the participants. She therefore relied most heavily on contemporary sources, or writings committed to paper shortly after the events.
She compensated for the medieval chroniclers' penchant for exaggeration. Richard's supposed deformity is a good case in point. Superstitions common during the middle ages suggested that deformities represented evil and moral depravity. None of Richard's contemporaries ever wrote that Richard had any deformity short of a well-developed shoulder from wielding a heavy sword. Physical descriptions rendered by those who knew him fail to mention anything of the kind. "The first seeds were not sown until after Richard's death~ it was John Rous who contended that Richard's right shoulder was higher than his left. (But then he also claimed that Richard was two years in his mother's womb.)"
Thomas More was another who contributed to this myth, but he reversed the shoulders! He also gave him a withered arm, a characteristic that does not coincide with Richard's prowess on the battlefield. More's motives are clarified· in detail by Paul Murray Kendall in his excellent biography of Richard III, which makes excellent companion reading to Penman's novel. More was writing an "attack on the Realpolitik practiced by the princes of the day," and it was useful for him to portray Richard as thoroughly bad. Shakespeare gave him a withered arm, hunchback and limp.
Penman is also skeptical of the Tudor claims that Richard murdered his nephews -- she makes Buckingham the culprit. Penman rather likes Richard, and he certainly is portrayed sympathetically.
revised 5/8/09
As far as I know, historians still believe in the villainous uncle painted by the Tudors who they claim killed his young nephews whose throne he supposedly usurped. Goodness knows that when I took English History at Columbia University, my British professor was scornful Richard could be seen otherwise. But if you can keep an open mind, well, it's certainly impossible I think not to fall in love with Penman's Richard, who we meet as a boy of seven.
Penman writes a beguiling, well-researched historical tapestry that I found engrossing and moving. I'm a fan of her writing in general. Not just in this novel, but her Here Be Dragons about medieval Wales are among my top favorite historical novels. Her characters feel both true to their time but fleshed out and real, and she gives their tragedies an excruciating poignancy.
I also like that she ends her novels with Author's Notes that untangle the history from the fiction and explain her liberties with what is known, the accepted view of historians and her rationale. This book is obviously well-researched and thought out, whatever you might think of her controversial take.
(And my friends out there who know I have a weakness for maligned characters? Well, I think the defenses of Richard III by authors like Tey, Jarman and Penman definitely gave me a soft spot for them and a willingness to look beyond appearances and suspect there might be more to history than what we find in textbooks--or college history classes.)
At one point, I had to go and look up EXACTLY when and who this tale was talking about, as the Richard Penman painted was NOT the Richard I had heard about, albeit just by vague notions (killed the Princes in the Tower, was a bad leader, was killed in battle and succeeded by Henry Tudor). The Richard in this story has plenty wrong with him, but he also has a lot right, and the theory that Penman espouses for the disappearance of the Princes indeed was persuasive, especially considering the repercussions.
It was also enthralling to see various people in their youths, especially Elizabeth who would become mother of Henry VIII.
Set during the last half of the 15th century, it covers the reign of Edward IV, his grasping queen Elizabeth Woodville,
Mostly the novel is about Richard, his beloved wife Anne Neville, his brief reign as King Richard III, culminating with Richard's defeat and death at Bosworth Field, the final battle of the War of the Roses, by Henry Tudor.
The novel portrays a worthy Richard, not the hunchbacked, murderer of the little Princes, propaganda created by Henry Tudor which led to Shakespeare's depiction.
Penman takes the historical renderings about King Richard III and dissects it engagingly to present a completely different (and
I liked the man as described in this book, and wonder how anyone lived through that period in time, especially a man with moral fiber. It was filled with love, loss, betrayal and suffering - no matter if you were King or common man.
I did feel that some of the battle scenes went on a little too long, making the book one that takes a lot of time to read. Unless you have a LOT of free time, plan on setting aside weeks to read this. It IS worth it, though, if you're a fan of historical novels. Penman's research with each of her books is amazing.
The sort of book that once you begin reading you 'can't put down'.