A princess from the German duchy of Kleve, Anna grows up in her father’s learned court. In a speculative subplot, she is seduced by an attractive cousin-by-marriage, leading to an emotionally difficult secret. When England seeks an alliance with Kleve, Anna grows alarmed about King Henry’s poor marital history, and their first meeting is hardly auspicious.
Weir draws readers into Anna’s sympathetic viewpoint as she adjusts to unfamiliar customs, gazes at Greenwich Palace’s ornate splendor, and puzzles over Henry’s physical rejection even as he treats her kindly. Warm and intelligent, Anna learns to choose her battles, even if it means divorcing the monarch who has, surprisingly, become her good friend.
Political, legal, and religious matters are dexterously illustrated, and Weir devotes ample time to the little-known struggles of Anna’s post-annulment life. A richly satisfying portrait of a woman who made the best of limited choices.
This is the third entry of Weir's series that I've reviewed for Booklist, the first two being Anne Boleyn, A King's Obsession and Jane Seymour, The Haunted Queen. This review first appeared in the 4/15/19 issue. I'm curious what the full title of the next novel about Katherine Howard will be. The books in this series typically extend for 500-600pp, and I'm also curious how Weir will transform Katherine Howard's short life into an epic of similar scope.
For what it's worth, I think the cover design and title for Anna of Kleve are perfect and create the impression (one fulfilled by the novel) that Weir will be looking at her latest subject in a different way. The model – attractive, youthful, and shown holding a book – even resembles Anne from the famous Holbein portrait that convinced Henry VIII to wed her. The "Flanders mare" nickname that she was saddled with (sorry...) came from a 17th-century source, as mentioned by Weir in her author's note.
Those Tudors are always interesting to read about and this book sounds good too - thanks for the review!
ReplyDeleteThis series is definitely worth reading for any Tudorphiles, and Anne of Cleves is one of the wives who doesn't have a lot of fiction written about her.
DeleteThis is a novel I should read having lived up the road from Ann of Cleves House in Lewes. But I have a memory she didn't end up living there, although there is info there.
ReplyDeleteI looked up pictures of that house online - I would love to visit there. You're right, though, it doesn't appear she actually lived there.
DeleteReading it now and loving it. Weir does a very nice job with Anne of Cleves--IMHO the most under-appreciated of Henry's wives.
ReplyDeleteI agree, and it's about time a worthwhile novel was written about her alone.
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