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Loading... Blood and Roses : One Family's Struggle and Triumph During the Tumultuous…by Helen Castor
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Fascinating family history told through a collection of family letters. The Pastons were interconnected with powerful families in Norfolk and their collected letters show the Wars of the Roses through the eyes of a family which had risen from very humble beginnings to a position of what would now be considered middle class. The shifting fortunes of local Dukes directly impacted the Pastons with regard to property, money, and court influence. This is a rich source of material and is examined and explained by Helen Castor to present a deep and colorful look at a turbulent time. ( )This work of history takes a look at the multi-generational Paston family throughout the years immediately after the Black Death and through the Wars of the Roses. The Pastons left behind an immense number of letters which have been miraculously preserved for six hundred years and as such are a historical treasure trove for those of us who wonder how gentlemen lived in the fifteenth century. Helen Castor recounts the rise and fall of their fortunes here, illuminating their individual personalities; the tenacious women, especially Agnes and Margaret, the hard-working William and John and the at times disappointing John II. Using the Pastons as a lens, Castor picks up larger issues at work in fifteenth century England and provides a fascinating biography about a surprisingly ordinary family. I read this one for my dissertation, so I paid much closer attention to it than I would have otherwise. To my surprise, I still really enjoyed it. Helen Castor writes clearly and succinctly, so that while we’re learning facts, we don’t feel bogged down by too much academic language. She also summarizes quite a bit of information about the period, so I think this would be useful for even those who aren’t too familiar with fifteenth-century England. Even though I’m well acquainted with the Black Death and the manueverings of the Wars of the Roses, it is integrated enough into the Pastons’ story so as not to become boring. I have personally read quite a number of the Paston letters; they’re invaluable because the Pastons were intimately involved at court and reflect the surprising amount of social mobility available shortly after so many died in the Black Death, so they have both an insider’s perspective and a consciousness of where they had come from. Castor reflects this well and does a very admirable job condensing the contents of the letters and quoting them where necessary to provide a steady, smooth narrative. It does falter occasionally because the Pastons were embroiled in a seventeen year struggle to reap some benefit out of Sir John Fastolf’s will after John I became closely involved with him. This can get boring, but the way the families’ characters show through the struggle kept me reading and it was certainly worth it in the end. This would be a wonderful book to start with for anyone who is interested in familiarizing themselves with fifteenth century England. For those who have enjoyed the recent spate of historical fiction centered around the Wars of the Roses, Blood and Roses would be an excellent choice to broaden your knowledge of the period while avoiding writing that feels too academic or stilted. I highly recommend it. So, so good! I couldn't put this down. I really appreciated--after glancing through several other studies of this era--Castor's grounding the war by attaching it to the Paston family. I was surprised by how much was known of the Pastons, especially since almost all histories from this era focus exclusively on the kings, queens, and wannabe kings and queens. Usually it's not until the reign of Henry VIII that you start getting biographies that narrow in on specific people, mostly because the records simply aren't extant. I always love reading history that has lots of anecdotes, and Castor doesn't disappoint here either. For those interested in this era, the war that frames it, or even medieval life in general (actually late medieval-early renaissance, but who's nitpicking?) I recommend it. An excellent book that takes you out of the Shakespearian drama of Kings and Queens and puts you in the shoes of the people who did the actual living and dying in the period. While reading it, I couldn't help but wonder what our thoughts and words will look like to historians five hundred years hence - will we be as recognizable and yet as different as the Pastons seem to us today? no reviews | add a review
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| Book description |
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The Wars of the Roses tore England asunder. Over the course of thirty years, four kings lost their thrones, countless men lost their lives on the battlefield or their heads on the block, and others found themselves suddenly flush with gold. Yet until now, little has been written about the ordinary people who lived through this extraordinary time.
Blood and Roses is a gripping, intimate story of one determined family conducting everyday business against the backdrop of a disintegrating society and savage civil war. Drawing on a rare trove of letters discovered in a tumbledown stately home, historian Helen Castor reconstructs the turbulent affairs of the Pastons through three generations of births, marriages, and deaths as they single-mindedly worked their way up from farmers to landed gentry. It is a remarkable chronicle of devotion, ambition, and survival that brings a remote and hazy era to vibrant new life.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)
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