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When christ and his saints slept by sharon kay penman
When christ and his saints slept by sharon kay penman







when christ and his saints slept by sharon kay penman

Penman's faithfulness to history makes When Christ and His Saints Slept slow reading at times, given the multiplicity of characters, battles and political betrayals, but readers who prefer novels that stick closely to the historical record over those which adopt composite characters and simplified chronologies will appreciate its level of detail. About halfway through, Maude's remarkable eldest son, the future King Henry II, emerges as a driving force in the plot and is portrayed in a series of vivid, compelling scenes. The story is brightened, though, by a fictional, illegitimate half-brother of Maude's, the exhuberant young Ranulf. Some readers may find it difficult to fully sympathize with either of these characters, whose flaws reflect a historical record of appallingly misguided decisions. By contrast, Maude is so intent on establishing control after seven years of subjugation to a quarrelsome, philandering husband eleven years her junior, that she is overly rigid and punitive, making enemies of people whose support she desperately needs. Penman portrays Stephen as an essentially kind man whose eagerness to please makes him a weak king, hesitant and vacillating, unable to make the difficult choices necessary to maintain his rule and establish peace. Thus began a long and bitter war that devastated England, most of whose people did not care which claimant sat on the throne, if only they could have peace. Many of the barons were reluctant to accept Maude not only because of her sex, but also because of her husband, the hot-tempered Geoffrey of Anjou, so they supported Stephen. Stephen broke his oath to defend her, claiming the crown for himself. When he died in 1135, Maude's cousin Stephen reached London at white-hot speed before she could arrive from the Continent. William the Conqueror's son Henry I named his daughter Maude as his heir. "And they said openly that Christ and his saints slept," says the twelfth century Peterborough Chronicle about the eighteen years of warfare between Stephen and Maude, known as "the Anarchy." When Christ and His Saints Slept by Sharon Kay Penman









When christ and his saints slept by sharon kay penman