Elizabeth, a young widow of extraordinary beauty catches the eye of the “To Be Crowned” King Edward. When he tries to seduce her Elizabeth holds strong for as attracted to Edward as she is, she does not want to bring shame onto her family. Yet Edward can think of no other woman than Elizabeth so he marries her in secret to buy his time as to when he can announce this marriage to an ordinary girl, not one of royalty as his hand was promised….
fact mixes with fiction as the story unfolds of Elizabeth’s two sons and the mystery that surrounds them and the Tower of London to this day as an unsolved mystery, lost to the winds… and the sea.

SO…. is it good to be King? Apparently. King Edward is constantly off in battle, hanging with the guys, and as time goes on women a plenty on the side.
AND if you ever thought to be a Queen would be sitting in the lap of luxury – spend a little time with this book. Elizabeth is constantly defending her household, at times sent into hiding for her and her children’s safety, and of course putting up with the Kings extra curricular activities.
I was first introduced to Philippa Gregory with The Other Boleyn Girl. I love love loved that book. In fact this was the first book our book club read and all agreed on that we enjoyed it very much. It was Philippa Gregory who first gave me the taste of historical fiction and I liked it. And I wanted more.
The White Queen was all I had hoped for… not only a fascinating fictional take of the interweaving of the life and times of King Edward and Queen Elizabeth, but also Philippa’s magical touch of mixing the non fiction throughout. As I marveled at all the things that Queen Elizabeth did to ensure her childrens future as royalty… I had to wonder if her own ambitions would not be the death of them all….
Going into this read I was not aware of the true mystery lying within these pages… one of the most famous unsolved mysteries in English history.
On Amazon this audio is $12.81 currently and well worth it. The series, entitles The Cousins War continues with The Red Queen, which is about Margaret Beaufort and her founding of the greatest dynasty England has ever known, The Tudors. Before you groan about this being a trilogy, fear not, each book stands alone wonderfully and there was no cliff hanger at the end of White Queen, although I would like to continue on with these books/audio.
Highly engaging, Philippa Gregory herself says at the end of this book it is more fact than fiction.
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