UK Reviews of ‘Witches: A Tale of Sorcery, Scandal and Seduction’ by Tracy Borman


UK reviews of ”Witches: A Tale of Sorcery, Scandal and Seduction’ by Tracy Borman have started appearing:


Witches: A Tale of Sorcery, Scandal and Seduction by Tracy Borman – review by Bella Bathurst

‘Witches is being sold as an account of the Belvoir scandals, but in truth, Tracy Borman has written a thorough and beautifully researched social history of the early 1600s, taking in everything from folk medicine to James I’s sex life.’

The Observer, 25 August 2013

Read the whole review at:

Witches Review – The Observer



Book review: Witches: A Tale Of Sorcery, Scandal and Seduction – Review by Caroline Jowett

‘As a work on the horrific treatment of witches throughout history, in particular the 16th and 17th centuries, it is shocking and illuminating.’

The Express, 23 August 2013

Read the whole review at:

Witches Review – The Express



Witches by Tracy Borman – Review by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst

‘…this is an entertaining piece of research that brings back to life three women who had the misfortune to live during a period that was terrified of the unknown and sought to tame that fear by turning it into a handful of dust.’

The Daily Telegraph, 20 August 2013.

Read the whole review at:

Witches Review – The Daily Telegraph


Devilish practices in cunning disguise’ by John Carey

‘On March 11, 1619, in the city of Lincoln two sisters, Margaret and Phillipa Flower, were hanged for witchcraft. Tracy Borman’s new book investigates their tragedy and combines it with a panoramic survey of the witch craze that swept through Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries.

…The only surviving record is a single unreliable pamphlet, published after their execution, and it needs all Borman’s skill and knowledge to make it into a coherent story.’

The Culture (The Sunday Times), 11th August 2013, p. 32-33

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UK Reviews of ‘Tudor: The Family Story’ by Leanda de Lisle


UK Reviews of ‘Tudor: The Family Story 1437-1603′ by Leanda de Lisle have started appearing.


(c) Chatto & Windus

(c) Chatto & Windus


‘Such is our continuing fascination with the Tudors that the author could have struggled to find anything new to say. In fact, her compellingly written book not only illuminates obscure family members – Lady Margaret Douglas, Henry VIII’s niece and the grandmother of James I, emerges as a significant link between the Tudors and the Stuarts who succeeded them – but also provides fresh perspectives on some of the most familiar figures in our history.

De Lisle challenges conventional portraits of Henry VIII and his daughters, Mary and Elizabeth I, in a work that elegantly combines wide-ranging research with fluent narrative.’

From: Monarchy Maker – Review by Nick Rennison – The Cutlure (The Sunday Times) – 22 September 2013, p39



‘…highly readable but no less scholarly biography: emphasising the role that women play in any dynastic society’

Read the whole review:


Review: Tudor – The Family Story, By Leanda de Lisle – How to breed a dynasty by Lesley McDowell
– The Independent – 8 September 2013



‘The Tudor family tree comes to vivid life in this enthralling history’

Read the whole review:


Tudor: The Family Story by Leanda de Lisle, review by Helen Castor
– The Daily Telegraph – 6 September 2013



‘Her crisp, uninterfering style lets the story tell itself. Almost every page is vivid with the well-noted detail.’

Read the whole review:

Lessons of a dynasty mired in blood and faith Tudor, by Leanda de Lisle – review by Charles Moore The Telegraph – 1 September 2013



‘For those wanting a more grown-up experience of the Tudor past, there are few better places to start than Leanda de Lisle’s new study.

Her briskly paced narrative traverses a vast historical terrain: from the dynastic struggles between Lancastrians and Yorkists in the 15th century…via the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell, to England’s life-and-death struggle with Spain in the 1580s and 1590s.

Many have told this story before. What makes de Lisle’s account so fresh is her decision to start her ‘family story’ not in 1485 when ‘good’ Henry Tudor beat ‘wicked’ Richard III at Bosworth and won the English crown for the new Tudor dynasty, but three generations earlier.

…In de Lisle’s account, all this is much more than just a colourful back story. It provides the political and psychological context within which so many of the Tudor monarchs’ later preoccupations and paranoias – their terror of a return to civil war, their ruthlessness – becomes comprehensible.

From the Welsh obscurity of their rise to the spinsterly glory of their extinction with the death of Elizabeth I in 1603, contemporary Europe produced no family saga that could match the Tudors.

Rarely has that story been told so well as here.’

From: The Tudors: a real drama – Review by John Adamson – Event (The Mail on Sunday) – 1 September 2013, p36-37.



‘But there is more to the Tudors than this reforming despot and his virgin daughter. What Leanda de Lisle has provided is an accomplished new perspective from the family’s Welsh origins to its extinction at the peak of its power.

…De Lisle is perhaps most interesting when discussing Henry’s daughter Elizabeth. Her reign was beset by courtiers encouraging her to marry and settle the question of succession. But as de Lisle says: “The Royal Family was for Elizabeth not a source of future stability but of immediate threat.” She was paranoid that those closest were constantly plotting her downfall and intent on getting her crown. Elizabeth “sought their murder, she drove them to despair and even madness, so she could die a natural death as queen in her bed”.

…If you thought there was nothing new to say about the Tudors think again: Leanda de Lisle has written a thorough and engaging reappraisal of this most paradoxical of dynasties. A reforming family of upstarts feared for the ferocious politics of their court yet who set an agenda that affects us still today.’

From: Racy dynasty with a core of pure steel – Review by Jessica Furst – The Daily Express – 16 August 2013



‘Leanda de Lisle’s accomplished survey of the ‘Renaissance romance and gothic horror’ of the Tudor era provides a vibrant reappraisal of this turbulent family saga.’

Read the whole review:

Tudor, by Leanda de Lisle – review by Anne Somerset The Spectator – 10 August 2013


This fresh take on the Tudor dynasty is history at its best. Covering everything from the Tudors’ obscure beginnings, when a Welsh squire named Owen Tudor literally fell into the lap of Henry V’s widow, Catherine of Valois, and later married her, to the death of the couple’s great-great-granddaughter, Elizabeth I…This compelling tale is driven by three-dimensional people and relationships, and de Lisle does a fantastic job of making them feel lived and dramatic.’

Read the whole review:

Nonfiction Review: Tudor: The Family Story – Publishers Weekly

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New book added to Books 2013

29th August 2013 – Witches: A Tale of Sorcery, Scandal and Seduction by Tracy Borman

‘Witches traces the dramatic events which unfolded at one of England’s oldest and most spectacular castles four hundred years ago. The case is among those which constitute the European witch craze of the 15th-18th centuries, when suspected witches were burned, hanged, or tortured by the thousand. Like those other cases, it is a tale of superstition, the darkest limits of the human imagination and, ultimately, injustice – a reminder of how paranoia and hysteria can create an environment in which nonconformism spells death. But as Tracy Borman reveals here, it is not quite typical. The most powerful and Machiavellian figure of the Jacobean court had a vested interest in events at Belvoir.He would mastermind a conspiracy that has remained hidden for centuries.’

From The Random House Group

Further details – Random House Group

Further details – Amazon.co.uk

Tracy Borman

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Reviews of ‘Crown of Thistles: The Fatal Inheritance of Mary Queen of Scots’ by Linda Porter


Reviews of ‘Crown of Thistles: The Fatal Inheritance of Mary Queen of Scots’ by Linda Porter have started appearing.


(c)  Andrew Lownie Literary Agency

(c) Andrew Lownie Literary Agency


‘In focusing on the family rivalries that led to Mary’s reign and fall, Porter has found a fresh approach to a familiar subject.’

Event – The Mail on Sunday 18/8/2013, p.37

You can read the whole of Leanda de Lisle’s review at her website:

Leanda de Lisle – My Review of ‘Crown of Thistles: The Fatal Inheritance of Mary Queen of Scots’]




The book is elegantly written, decently researched and, crucially, it will alert a new readership to a neglected subject.

Read the whole review:

Linda Porter: Crown Of Thistles – The Fatal Inheritance Of Mary Queen Of Scots – Review by Jonathan Wright – The Herald – 10 August 2013


‘A racy tale of Mary. Elizabeth and the dawn of a dynasty grips Melanie Reid’

… ‘Into all this phwoar and war steps the historian Linda Porter, cooly crafting the authentic story of how Mary, Queen of Scots and Elizabeth I came to be, rather than simply who they were. This is Porter’s unique selling point in a crowded field. She looks at the Tudors and Stewarts from the period of the queens’ great-grandfathers: two dynasties, English and Scottish, fighting like vicious neighbours over a Leylandii hedge, yet ultimately converging within the Union of the Crowns under James I & VI in 1603.

…Porter’s forte, though, lies in reappraising figures who have been neglected, as her biographies of Mary Tudor and Katherine Parr demonstrated.

This book is at its best when she alights on largely forgotten characters, in particularly Henry VII and James IV, the grandfathers of the famous queens.

…Her writing is bold, insightful and vivid…’

Saturday Review (The Times), 10 August 2013, p 12

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The Syon Portrait


Yesterday, Dr Stephan Edwards posted a report of his latest research regarding the Syon portrait of Lady Jane Grey. Building on his work over the last 3 years, the report contains the results of the dendrochronological tests on the two Syon portraits of Jane.

(c) Syon Park

(c) Syon Park

You can read his full report here:

Some Grey Matter – The Portrait of Lady Jane Grey at Syon House

Dr Edwards will be answering your questions about the Syon Portrait in mid August over at the Lady Jane Grey Reference Guide

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