Devil’s Brood Review
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This is the final novel in Penman’s trilogy about Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine and is centered around the implosion of their marriage and the rebellions of their sons. While this book can stand alone I would recommend readers start with “When Christ and His Saints Slept” and then “Time and Chance” to get the full and amazing story. It is a long novel just like her others but it is well worth the read in my opinion. This last installment of this amazing story has everything you could want in a novel: love, hate, betrayal, greed. Let me just say that Penman is an extraordinary writer. I wish all writers could make characters come alive like she does. The political and personal turmoil of this family is as twisted and complicated as any modern government bill but Penman manages to write it in a way that is very easy to understand and fun to read. A big part of this is her ability to make these people that have been dead for hundreds of years come alive on the pages.
This story picks up where the last one left off. Henry has gone to Ireland after Becket’s death supposedly to put down rebellions there (though it is most likely to avoid punishment from the Church). Henry and Eleanor’s three oldest sons feel like they are of an age where they can handle more power, which their father refuses to give them. They end up in a rebellion against him, aided in part by their mother Eleanor and Louis, the French King. He quells the rebellion and eventually forgives his sons (not a great move on his part) but he can not forgive his wife and he imprisons her (and she stays that way for sixteen years). This should be the end of matters but Henry’s sons behave like they don’t have a brain in their heads. They scoff at their father’s generosity and turn on him again and again. He forgives them again and again (again, not a great move on his part), blindly trusting them and finding all kinds of excuses for their behavior because he does love them. Two of his sons eventually pay the price of their treachery, though not at their father’s hands, and one does become king upon Henry’s death.
Eleanor certainly comes across differently in this novel than she did in the last one. Yes, she does spend most of this book imprisoned by her husband but (probably because of that) she really grows and matures throughout. She learns, as her arrogant sons never could, the error of her past actions (for the most part) and how they helped cause this rupture of their family. I still like her character here, even though I was mad at her for rebelling in the first place. You can really feel how helpless she feels when she hears of the trouble her sons are causing. The later scenes between her and Henry are quite touching as you can tell that these two very stubborn and prideful people, while not able to say it out loud to each other, realize the errors they’ve made.
I feel so sorry for Henry through this entire novel. Even though I do get irritated at his stubbornness and his complete blindness when it comes to his sons, I pity him for what happens again and again. It really broke my heart how he kept forgiving those arrogant boys, offered them wonderful things, trusted them, made excuses for them, and they kept turning around and stabbing him in the back. For a man as smart as he was it is amazing that he couldn’t see what his sons were really like. He did bring some of it on himself; the crowning of Hal, while he was doing it to make sure what happened to his mother didn’t happen to his son, was probably one of the biggest mistakes he ever made. He also was maddeningly stubborn at times but overall I felt like he was trying his hardest to make everything strong and secure for his son.
I did not like any of the sons. None of them. I felt like they were spoiled, arrogant, selfish, and incredibly ungrateful. I wanted to throttle all of them at many, many points throughout the novel. Yes, their father was a stubborn man but they couldn’t see that 1, he was doing what he could to make their “empire” strong and stable so they wouldn’t have to worry about much when they took the reins, and 2, they’d eventually have control of their lands when their father died. That was the trouble though - they wanted it all and they wanted it NOW. And not only do they stab their father in the back repeatedly, they turn on each other over and over again. They truly seemed as if they were the devil’s brood.
Penman has created another wonderful masterpiece here. I would recommend this book, along with all her others, to those that love historical fiction and to those that haven’t been bitten by that bug yet, to readers who are quite familiar with this period of history and to those that are not. This book and author are sure to open your eyes and you will probably end up being bitten by that wonderful historical fiction bug along the way.
Overview
The long-awaited and highly anticipated final volume in Penman’s trilogy of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine—a tumultuous conclusion to this timeless story of love, power, ambition, and betrayal.
Where the second novel in the trilogy, Time And Chance, dealt with the extraordinary politics of the twelfth century, climaxing with the murder of Thomas Becket and Henry’s confrontation with the Church and self-imposed exile to Ireland, Devil’s Brood centers on the implosion of a family. And because it is a royal family whose domains span the English Channel and whose alliances encompass the Christian world, that collapse will have dire consequences. This is a story of betrayal as Henry’s three eldest sons and his wife enter into a rebellion against him, aligning themselves with his bitterest enemy, King Louis of France. But it is also the story of a great king whose brilliance forged an empire but whose personal blind spots led him into the most serious mistake of his life.
Sharon Kay Penman has created a novel of tremendous power, as two strong-willed, passionate people clash, a family divides, and a marriage ends in all but name. Curiously, it is a novel without villains—only flawed human beings caught up in misperceptions and bad judgment calls. Most devastating to Henry was not his sons’ rebellion but his wife’s betrayal in joining them. How could it happen that two people whose love for each other was all consuming end up as bitter adversaries? That is the heart of Penman’s tale in Devil’s Brood.
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Customer Reviews
History Lover - M. Casey - PA
This period of history and the unfolding of an incredible, lengthy love story in Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry II is quite simply fascinating. Although this is a continuance of other books Penman has written about this family, you needn’t have read any of the others to lose yourself completely in this one. Two smart, powerful people have just as much trouble with offspring as any other family as their boys tend to be disobedient, contentious, and disrespectful. The world pays attention to them, but their sons (their daughters are good girls!)ignore their advice and rebel as any teenager does. The difference? Their sons want to seize control of a major part of the known world from them.
This is compelling and wonderful– history brought to life. Penman has done a good job of researching the time period and making it seem as real as possible without losing the reality of what we know in history. Simply a great read.
Fascinating - Kirsten G. Cutler - Santa Rosa, California
I am almost finished reading this fascinating historical fiction book. It is about King Henry the Second, and his tempestuous relationships with his three older sons. Eleanor is the main character but the King and his sons provide the main drama with their constant disagreements. This is a dense read that is endlessly enthralling. I had to go to work this morning, or I would have finished the last few pages. Recommended highly!
Reviewed from library copy.
No disappointment here! - Martha Story Foisy -
Penman has done it again! As usual, I am throughly absorbed in this well written, well researched historical novel. When ever I am reading a novel by this author, my husband considers himself an “historical fiction widower” since I have my nose stuck in the book, ignoring all else until I’ve finished it! She makes Eleanor and Henry’s remarkable and sad life come to life.
Product Information : Feb 04, 2010 18:15:18
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