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Brenda Honeyman

Author of The Warrior King

25 Works 102 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Also includes: Brenda Clarke (1)

Works by Brenda Honeyman

The Warrior King (1998) 19 copies, 1 review
Richmond and Elizabeth (1970) 15 copies, 2 reviews
All Through the Day (1983) 7 copies
Harry the King (1971) 6 copies
A Rose in May (1984) 6 copies
Good Duke Humphrey (1973) 5 copies
Queen and Mortimer (1974) 5 copies
The Far Morning (1982) 5 copies
King's Minions (1974) 4 copies
Last of the Barons (1998) 3 copies
A Durable Fire (1993) 3 copies
At the King's Court (1977) 3 copies
Richard Plantagenet (1997) 2 copies
King's Tale (1977) 2 copies
Emma, the Queen (1978) 2 copies
Edward the Warrior (1975) 2 copies
All the King's Sons (1976) 2 copies
Harold of the English (1979) 2 copies
Brother Bedford (1972) 1 copy
Macbeth, King of Scots (1977) 1 copy
Golden Griffin (1976) 1 copy
Kingmaker (1969) 1 copy
Three Women (1987) 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1926-07-30
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
Bristol, Gloucestershire, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
Disguised as a romance novel (see the cover art and the blurb) this is actually not a bad little history of Henry VII's rise to the throne. NOTE: I have no idea why this review is dated 1969!
I wanted to read this, I really did - but first lines should grab the reader's attention by the scruff of the neck and not let it go. So when I saw this as the first line: The two young men were closely related, the father of the younger boy being first-cousin to the elder, and their mothers having been sisters I juddered to a halt, and haven't been able to face ploughing on through the chapter or indeed the book.

Skimming it, I've seen a lot of exposition, and a startling description of show more Henry's injury at Shrewsbury as making the blood run down his face. Surely the author knew that the arrow lodged in the base of his brain and took days to extract? It doesn't augur well for the rest of the book.

Certainly the historical Henry is a difficult character to write about sympathetically, and the times were hard, but the author didn't seem to want to engage with either her subject or her readers. Perhaps it gets better later on? If so, I'm prepared to admit that I made an over-hasty judgement.
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Statistics

Works
25
Members
102
Popularity
#187,250
Rating
2.9
Reviews
4
ISBNs
42
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs