Synopses & Reviews
She was a child crowned a queen....
A sinner hailed as a saint....
A lover denounced as a whore...
A woman murdered for her dreams...
Margaret Georges Mary Queen of Scotland & the Isles brings to life the fascinating story of Mary, who became the Queen of Scots when she was only six days old. Raised in the glittering French court, returning to Scotland to rule as a Catholic monarch over a newly Protestant country, and executed like a criminal in Queen Elizabeths England, Queen Mary lived a life like no other, and Margaret George weaves the facts into a stunning work of historical fiction.
Review
"The best kind of historical novel, one the reader can't wait to get lost in." --
San Francisco Chronicle"A massive, erudite, and entertaining novel that skillfully weaves historical fact and plausible fiction." --New York Newsday
"George has creative a lively, gallant Mary of intelligence, charm and terrible judgment...A popular, readable, inordinately moving tribute to a remarkable queen." --Kirkus Reviews (starred)
"A painstakingly researched novel that makes history live. The author's deep sympathy for her subject renders Mary an entirely real and unforgettable heroine." --Publishers Weekly (starred)
"An evocative portrait."--The New York Times Book Review
"Dramatic...Romantic...George makes Mary a heroine to identify with because of her spirit, wit and charm...A triumph." --Houston Chronicle
Synopsis
She was a child crowned a queen....
A sinner hailed as a saint....
A lover denounced as a whore...
A woman murdered for her dreams...
About the Author
Margaret George is the author of The Autobiography of Henry VIII, The Memoirs of Cleopatra, and Elizabeth I, among other novels. Margaret first got the idea to write historical fiction when, after reading numerous books that viewed Henry VIII through the eyes of his enemies and victims, she found herself wondering if there might be another side to the story. She became determined to let Henry speak for himself, and it took fifteen years, about three hundred books of background reading, three visits to England to see every extant building associated with Henry, and five handwritten drafts for her to answer the question: What was Henry really like? Margaret was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and has traveled extensively. She and her husband live in Madison, Wisconsin.
Reading Group Guide
1. “Is there no Scots in me at all?” Mary asks her uncle when she is still in France. To what extent do you feel that Mary——who never knew her father and was brought up in France——was truly Scottish? How much does “blood” count?
2. What do you think of Marys choice to go back to Scotland to take her place as queen there? How did both Scotlands needs and her own figure into that choice?
3. All of Marys major decisions were impulsive——to go to Scotland, to marry Darnley and Bothwell, to flee to Elizabeth. She was a cool and quick thinker in physical crises, such as the Riccio murder and her own escapes——but not in politics, where she was unable to read character. Is it possible for someone like Mary to be an effective ruler?
4. Who was Marys strongest adversary——Knox or Elizabeth? Short of converting, there was nothing that Mary could have done to placate Knox, but were there ways that she could have won Elizabeth?
5. Marys reign has been described as “a series of plots and pardons.” Do you see any rationale behind all of her plots, raids, and skullduggery?
6. Mary had a difficult time in Scotland from the moment she landed in a dense fog, and in some senses she never came out of that fog. What could she have done differently — when she first arrived, when deciding to marry, when dealing with the aftermath of Darnleys murder? At what point was it too late to salvage her reign? Is there any scenario that would have altered the end result?
7. How do you view Marys involvement with Bothwell? Do you find it foolhardy, or do you admire her for it?
8. Was Mary literally a femme fatale? “Those who love her seem to die untimely or unnatural deaths,” Bothwell muses. Queen Elizabeth warned Norfolk to “take care of his pillow.” What would you think if you were prospective bridegroom #4?
9. Elizabeth gained her crown at age twenty-five, while Mary lost hers at the same age. They also had vastly different childhoods: Elizabeth had to protect herself from the vicissitudes of plots at court, whereas Mary was in France, far removed from the turmoil in Scotland. In what ways did their upbringings — Marys sheltered, Elizabeths exposed — shape them as adults and as rulers?
10. It has been said of the Stuarts, “they did not know how to rule, but they knew how to die.” Mary was the first Stuart to fail as a ruler but succeed in a glorious, memorable death scene. Did her death redeem her life? Was she a martyr to Catholicism, as she claimed, or largely playing a theatrical part?