The life of Mary Queen of Scots An accidental tragedy

Roderick Graham, 1934-

Book - 2009

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BIOGRAPHY/Mary Queen of Scots
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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Pegasus Books 2009.
Language
English
Main Author
Roderick Graham, 1934- (-)
Edition
1st Pegasus Books ed
Physical Description
xx, 476 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., ports., geneal. tables ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781605980492
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

French-raised Mary Stuart's life began with tragedy and ended with tragedy for both the monarch and Scotland. Mary Queen of Scots has not always been shown in a positive light, but Graham's pro-Elizabeth bias appears in his showcasing of the instincts of wily, intellectual Queen Elizabeth against naive, spoiled Mary. Raised in a "gilded cage" in France to be an ornamental object at court, she ignored governing and deadly court politics as long as she could, and she routinely irritated her English counterpart, Elizabeth. Unsuccessful as ruler in a fragile Scotland, the queen grew even unhappier as the wife of John Darnley, a syphilitic narcissist. All in all, Graham, producer of BBC-TV's Elizabeth, narrates Mary's short life as a hellish fairy tale for naughty children, ending with the queen's grisly death. This dense biography in strongest in carefully detailing the Western European political atmosphere of Mary's youth and nimbly describes the Scottish nobles' machinations to improve their lot before forcing her to abdicate. 16 pages of illus. (July 22) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Scottish writer and producer Graham (BBC's Elizabeth) delivers a robust, evenhanded life of Elizabeth I's Catholic cousin and eventual betrayer. The author clearly has little sympathy for pampered Mary Stuart (154287), who lacked her older cousin's masculine education, not to mention Elizabeth's shrewd political instincts, and relied instead on her charming good looks to manipulate men. (Graham calls Mary "one of the great weepers of history.") Early on, Mary was treated as a pawn by the Guises, her mother's aristocratic French family, who controlled the Scottish throne she inherited from her father, James V, when she was six days old. The Guises arranged Mary's upbringing at the French court of Henri II and her betrothal at age four to his son and heir. Raised under the wily blandishments of Henri's beautiful mistress, Diane de Poitiers, Mary was steeped in Catholicism and courtly romances. Her 1558 marriage to the unstable, sickly Dauphin (who became king a year later) ended with his untimely death in 1560. She was returned to Scotland at age 18 mostly because no one knew what to do with her, an unfortunate theme throughout her life. Mary provoked her own expulsion from her native country and throne with her two subsequent marriages. She was implicated in the assassination of Lord Darnley, father of her only child, the future James VI, and later compromised by the ambitious machinations of the adulterous Lord Bothwell. Facing imprisonment in Scotland, the "whore queen" threw herself on the mercy of her reluctant cousin. During the next 20 years, her shelter in England gradually grew into a stricter imprisonment as the spy network of William Cecil, Elizabeth's closest advisor, intercepted Mary's treasonous letters seeking help among Catholic factions and even from England's archenemy, Philip II of Spain. Despite his occasional exasperation with his subject, Graham is a knowledgeable guide to the tricky terrains of Scottish and British history in the 16th century. An intelligent author gracefully feeds readers a great deal of complicated dynastic information in a most palatable fashion. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.