Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Virgin Queen: Elizabeth I, Genius Of The Golden Age

The Virgin Queen: Elizabeth I, Genius Of The Golden Age

List Price: $72.00
Your Price: $72.00
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellent, readable biography
Review: Christopher Hibbert is one of my favorite historical writers. At all times, lucidity, clarity, and narrative curiosity drive his writings. I first read this one years ago, and it's still the most accessible biography of Elizabeth I available. My favorite passages, and the ones I've read to history and English students time and again, are those on what Elizabethan women went through to look beautiful in their eyes. Anybody up for lipstick made of mercuric sulphide? The whole book is full on interesting little corners like that. All in all, a lively book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Grabs your interest without sensationalizing
Review: Elizabeth I is one of those historical figures so enveloped in mythology that it is difficult to gain a clear view of the actual person behind the myth. Christopher Hibbert has provided a sober biography of Elizabeth that goes a long way toward providing the reader with just such a view.

The book begins with a poignant prologue that provides a brief history of Henry VIII, his reign, and his six wives, including Ann Boleyn, Elizabeth's mother. The events covered by the prologue are ones that resonate throughout Elizabeth's life. One can scarcely imagine what effect it has on a young girl to learn that before she turned three her mother was executed on orders of her father. Much of the conflict with which she had to contend during her adult life was largely the direct legacy of her father. These conflicts include those with her half-sister Mary, her cousin Mary Queen of Scots, the war with Spain, and the religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants.

The bare facts of Elizabeth's life have the makings of a great melodrama, but Hibbert does not fall into that trap. Nor does he spend much time with conjecture. However, he does paint a vivid enough picture so that it is easy enough to read between the lines. When he writes of Elizabeth and Robert Dudley going off horseback riding together for hours on end, he leaves it at that - most readers will reach the same conclusion. Similarly, Hibbert will relate what a prevailing rumor was, but for the most part resists speculating as to the veracity of those rumors; again, the reader is left free to reach his or her own conclusion.

Good detail is given in describing Elizabeth's personality and physical appearance. The attention to physical appearance is not superficial - Elizabeth put a great deal of thought and effort into appearance, being well aware of the effect it had on nobles and commoners alike. And it is entirely appropriate that Hibbert spends the space he does regarding her makeup, jewels, clothing, etc. Her strengths (intelligence and courage among them) as well as weaknesses (vanity, indecisiveness) are made abundantly clear by Hibbert's writing.

In describing the workings of her court and her administration, a picture is revealed not only of Elizabeth's reign in particular, but of English royalty in general, including the politics and intrigues of the royal court. Of particular interest to me was the chapter titled "The Queen on Progress", which is about the trips the Queen and a veritable army of attendants would make into various locales across England. No other section of the book so clearly revealed the tremendous waste and corruption that is inherent in any monarchy.

Hibbert makes an effort to provide a thorough portrait of those figures who played pivotal roles in Elizabeth's life, including the two Mary's, Robert Dudley, Sir Walter Raleigh, and Robert Devereaux. (My personal favorite is Sir William Cecil.) Providing us with these portraits makes the narrative of Elizabeth's life all the more compelling.

My complaints about the book are relatively minor. First, the book is organized rather arbitrarily into two sections of 10 chapters apiece. Sometimes the time line is a bit obscure. And I would like to see a little more about the common people of England during her reign, and the effect her policies had on them. But overall, it's a thoroughly interesting and enjoyable biography.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not just a boring bio
Review: For those interested in the life of Queen Elizabeth, I recommend this biography. Unlike a cold interpretation, Hibbert allows us an accounting that reads fairly easily with descriptive details lively enough to keep the pages turning.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An interesting biography
Review: I would've rated this book higher, except that biographies aren't exactly my favorite reading material. It was well written but many important events, such as the invasion of the Spanish Armada, seemed to be overlooked quite a bit. Her personal life is very well written and at times, quite....interesting? I'd recommend this book for biography buffs and those of you working on your summer assignment for 10th grade. :)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good Introduction to Elizabeth I
Review: I've been a fan of Hibbert's historical works for many years and this is a solid one-volume introduction to a woman whose fascinating life almost seems made for the movies (as it frequently has been). However, specialists in Elizabeth should be aware this is definitely an introduction and does not go into the depth that authors like Alison Plowden bring to their multiple volumes. And I did find - having read a great many books on Elizabeth - that there was an indefinable quality to Hibbert's work that became slightly irksome. In the early 20th century and before, it was standard convention to write about Elizabeth's prevarication, her changes of mood and occasional bad temper, and the despair of her (all male) counselors, as a typical example of an emotional women who happened to be queen. I've even read volumes which imply that Elizabeth's reputation is largely due to her male council keeping her feminine weaknesses under control. Only in the past decades has that slightly condescending tone been dropped and Elizabeth seen for the statesman she was (albeit, still a difficult woman!) I detected the slightest hint of that condescension in Hibbert's book, particularly in his later chapters dealing with Elizabeth's agonies in deciding how to deal with Mary Queen of Scots. For that reason only, I rate it a "4" and not a "5." With that slight caveat, an excellent introduction overall.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A very dull, dry piece
Review: Mr Hibbert writes in a very dull, dry tone and I found it incredibly hard to be engaged in the story. He confuses the reader with time, people and his interpretation of what Elizabeth was like as a woman and a queen. I only read this because I had to (for school). If you don't have to read it, then DON'T! It will bore you to death.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A somewhat laborious book, with little insight to Elizabeth
Review: Perhaps I was expecting too much of this book when I began reading it; I had hoped that this work would provide an interesting and intimate portrait of Elizabeth, as well as a clear account of the contributions of her reign. However, the book did not succeed at doing either. The book provides some interesting events of the period, but too often keeps the reader at a distance from the Queen. Through cumbersome and lengthy sentences, and boring verbiage, the author loses the reader in the reader's attempt to maintain an interest in the life of Elizabeth I. Having finished the book, I reflected on what I had learned about Elizabeth and found that I had more questions about events that were discussed in the book, than I did before I read the author's account of those events.

I highly recommend that any reader looking for a detailed and balanced account of Queen Elizabeth I look elsewhere.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brief Biography That Is To The Point
Review: This book is a good general introduction to Queen Elizabeth. Hibbert always paints a portrait of his subject, rather than discussing every detail of the person's life. Since most biographers write too much, we should all be grateful to Hibbert. He does a great job of describing Queen Elizabeth's decisionmaking process, her interactions with her advisors, and her reluctance to marry. He also explains the religious issues that surrounded the time briefly yet thoughtfully.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The elusive elizabeth
Review: This book is very easy to read and is illustrated. For people who are just familarizing themselves with this legend, should read this book because it doesn't get into the political affairs because after all, hibbert set out to write the biography of queen elizabeth. It is very hard to find out how the queen thought because hibbert didn't put much of his opinion because after all how can you know if the queen made a decision for teh better of her country or to cover up a tantrum? This book had some false information, however, the reader will not be grossly mislead. This book has an absence of chronology so it is impossible to understand why the queen made decisions that she could not have at a different time. Hibbert is a good writer, one has called him a "gloriously versatile writer" but hibbert's knowledge only is backed up by his pen and lacks any specialized knowledge of Elizabeth. But hey, give the man a break we are dealing with an actress who was never off-stage. read the book, do her some justice and compare with other opinions.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: a good read for those who are interested in Elizabeth I
Review: This is a biography of Elizabeth I, The Virgin Queen. And that's exactly what it is. Queen Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry the VIII is a legend, which Mr. Hibbert attempts to address. Often, this is a dry and, at times, tedious read. However, the details of Elizabeth's physical appearance, politics, and idiosyncracies are extremely interesting. The author details life with Elizabeth and her court, including both of the Queen Marys, Robert Dudley, Sirs Walter Raleigh and William Cecil and others.

The time line is obscure - Mr. Hibbert jumps around quite a bit and it can be confusing to the reader that isn't paying exacting attention. I wouldn't recommend it to a casual reader looking for a lot of melodrama and action. But, all in all, this is a good read for those who are interested in Elizabeth I.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates