We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

The Demon's Brood

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781472119612

Price: £12.99

Select a format:

ebook

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

The Plantagenets reigned over England longer than any other family – from Henry II, to Richard III. Four kings were murdered, two came close to deposition and another was killed in a battle by rebels. Shakespeare wrote plays about six of them, further entrenching them in the National Myth.

Based on major contemporary sources and recent research, acclaimed historian Desmond Seward provides the first readable overview of the whole extraordinary dynasty, in one volume.

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

This is a big ballsy history of the sort that is seldom written in these nuanced days, and Seward reminds us of a style that has been all-but lost in this thundering account of the Plantagenet family — from 999 when Count Fulk burnt his young wife in her wedding dress, through 500 years to the man he calls the “suicide king”, Richard III… Best of all, and typical of this vivid opinionated history, is the postscript at the end of every reign when the author — who has not minced his words in the previous chapter — gives a magisterial summing up of the progress so far…. The general reader will find this book invaluable for filling in gaps of knowledge and putting a vivid story to a previously unknown monarch… It is a dramatic and page-turning history taking in the loss of the Norman inheritance, and then the shifting ownership of the “English” lands in France during the Hundred Years’ War. Seward’s description of the battle of Agincourt is particularly vivid … this is the medieval world — populated with heroes and seductresses, gods and murderers —and few know it better than Desmond Seward
Philippa Gregory
Praise for The Last White Rose: History as compelling as any novel.
Independent