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Anne Boleyn

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386
PAGES
~6h 26min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
Franklin Classics Trade Press 16 views
ISBN
9781016691604, 9781016687355, 9780341865834, 034382339X, 9780343823399, 0343823403, 9780343823405, 0341865826, 9780341865827
Editions
Paperback
Hardcover
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About Author

Vercors

Jean Marcel Adolphe Bruller was born in France, the son of a Hungarian Jewish father and French mother. He studied to be an electrical engineer, but became instead a graphic artist, producing illustrations and cartoons and known for his absurd illustrated novels. His most notable pre-war work was illustrating André Maurois's Patapoufs and Filifers. In 1941, during the German occupation of France, he joined the resistance. He and fellow author Pierre de Lescure co-founded the clandestine publishing house Les Éditions de Minuit. The first book they printed was 'Le Silence de la Mer', which Bruller wrote and published under the pseudonym Vercors. Le Silence de la Mer, which dealt with the moral impossibility of collaboration with the Germans, was dropped into France in large numbers by the British RAF.

Description

Ever since she first appeared in the Tudor court, Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII's second queen, has been a mystery and a source of controversy. Even her birth is shrouded in obscurity; both year and place are the subject of debate. Was she beautiful, as those who fell under her spell believed, or was she a rather plain girl blessed with striking eyes and a wealth of black hair? More mysterious still is the nature of her role in one of the most turbulent times in British history. Henry, who wrote her impassioned love letters and composed songs in her praise, honored her as no woman was ever honored before, and finally defied the Pope in order to marry her. Her enemies at the time believed she owed her success to witchcraft, and indeed she bore two 'devil's marks'. But was she, in fact, only a hapless pawn, subject to the passions of a notoriously mercurial autocrat? Why was her fall from favor so sudden and complete? Henry's love changed to a hatred so vicious that he conspired with his chief minister to have her accused of adultery with five men - one her own brother. Four of them went to the block protesting her innocence - and their own. *** Norah Lofts is a well-loved author of historical fiction; her 100,000s of fans will enjoy her nonfiction biography of the most interesting of Henry's wives. Praise for Norah Lofts: • 'The narrative has pace, the characters substance, the finale a powerful twist and the sense of period is rich and authentic' THE SUNDAY TIMES • 'Norah Lofts is a capable and professional writer, a natural storyteller whose characters are neatly and believably portrayed: whose prose is smooth and readable' THE NEW YORK TIMES.

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