The First Elizabeth | 
enlarge | Author: Carolly Erickson Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin Category: Book
List Price: $17.95 Buy Used: $1.50 You Save: $16.45 (92%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 21 reviews Sales Rank: 202727
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 448 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 031216842X Dewey Decimal Number: 942.055092 EAN: 9780312168421 ASIN: 031216842X
Publication Date: August 15, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
In this remarkable biography, Carolly Erickson brings Elizabeth I to life and allows us to see her as a living, breathing, elegant, flirtatious, diplomatic, violent, arrogant, and outrageous woman who commands our attention, fascination, and awe.With the special skill for which she is acclaimed, Carolly Erickson electrifies the senses as she evokes with total fidelity the brilliant colors of Elizabethan clothing and jewelry, the texture of tapestries, and even the close, perfumed air of castle rooms. Erickson demonstrates her extraordinary ability to discern and bring to life psychological and physical reality.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 16 more reviews...
Inaccurate April 11, 2008 Erickson gets one star for a lively and readable writing style. She's great at engaging the reader.
I'd give her zero for accurate substance.
If you examine her body of work, you find that she's a Mary Tudor apologist and that bias informs every line of this "biography" of Elizabeth as she revels in gossip and ignores accomplishments.
Erickson should stick to novels, because that's what she's writing here. She misrepresents facts and her editorial slant colours every line. Nearly any other biography would give you a better idea of what really went on.
A good biography of the Virgin Queen by Tudor Scholar Erickson December 4, 2005 6 out of 11 found this review helpful
Carolly Erickson has done her homework on the Tudors of England and in her 1984 biography of Queen Elizabeth (1533-1603) does a fine biographical profile. Elizabeth's mother Anne Boleyn died at the stake failing to produce a male heir for the cruel HENRY VIII. Her only chld was Elizabeth who ruled Britain from 1558 to her death in 1603. Elizabeth had a difficult and dangerous life dealing with such enemies as: 1. The might of Spain and France. 2. Various Catholic groups wanting to assasinate the Protestant leaning queen. 3. Personal enemies include her half-sister Queen Bloody Mary who at times had Elizabeth imprisoned in the tower. She burned Protestants at the stake in her short reign from 1546-1553 following the death of her half-brother Edward VI (son of Henry and Jane Seymour). Another enemy was Mary Queen of Scots who Elizabeth had executed in 1587. 4. Elizabeth was very intelligent, crafty and skilled in survival in a dangerous time of civil war, various rebellions and complicated international political and religious warfare. Erickson is good at writing Elizabeth's story focusing on her many love affairs most notably with the Earl of Leicester. Elizabeth's reign is well told in this biography which is a good place for a burgeoning interest in Tudor History to bloom. The book is one of the finest I have read on Elizabeth. I can recommend it to anyone who enjoys a good story well told about one of the great female rulers in history!
Nearly reads like a novel ... August 22, 2002 7 out of 10 found this review helpful
I tend to read mostly fiction, but for some reason earlier this year I decided to foray into biographies. This book gives you a peek into Elizabethan life, gives you insight into Elizabeth I's personality, and you learn quite a lot of history, scandals, and rumours-of-the-day along the way. This book reads more like a biographical novel than a pure biography, which, considering the subject matter is about 500-years old, probably means some license was taken with dialogue, etc., however, I think the style makes the subject infinitely more memorable.
First Elizabeth a reading pleasure January 25, 2002 37 out of 38 found this review helpful
The major difference in "The First Elizabeth" by Carolly Erickson and "The Life of Elizabeth I" by Alison Weir is stylistic. Both women are thoroughly versed in the life of their royal subject, and obviously enthusiastic about her as well.Erickson's style, however, leans more toward novelistic narrative. She seems to be sitting with you, telling you a story about this great monarch with her infamous "virgin" status, her political adeptness, her fearsome temper, her penchant for swearing oaths that made one's blood freeze, and her ability to command deep love and adoration from her subjects. This style is especially appealing for those for whom this biography is their first foray into Tudor biography. It introduces the major players in the queen's life thoroughly so that one is well acquainted with Robert Dudley, Cecil and Walsingham, as well as Mary I and the many other colorful characters that populated the Queen's life. You also get a real feel for the terror and uncertainty of Elizabeth's youth, when she lived in fear of death at the hands of her unstable, Catholic sister. Erickson adroitly paints a stunning (and sometimes shocking) picture of life at court - and what a life it must have been. Living at the various castles Elizabeth moved between (they changed castles regularly so that the one previously used could be cleaned and "aired out") was far from our 21st century idea of luxury, and when you read about the trials and travails inherent in the Queen's annual "progresses", you'll never gripe about rush-hour traffic again! Again, I would recommend this to anyone starting out to read about Elizabeth I, and to the reader already familiar with the life of the greatest queen of England. Those of the latter group might find that the author falls in love a bit too much with her subject (and who wouldn't, as this lady is one of the most fascinating people in history). In some places towards the end the flow of the narrative (going from event to event) isn't quite as seamless as it could be (you feel as though you are jumping from one to the other without a lead-in sentence/paragraph) but never mind that. Erickson does a marvelous job of painting a portrait of the life and times of Elizabeth and it's a most pleasurable learning experience and enjoyable read. After finishing "Elizabeth I", the reader would do well to continue on with Weir's biography mentioned above. I started with Weir and am now committed to reading Erickson's extensive series on the Tudors, including "Great Harry", "Mistress Anne", etc.
Hail Britainia December 10, 2001 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
A great book about a Queen whose story reads more like "The Godfather" than you'd guess.Elizabeth I, thrust onto the throne while her country was still in the midst of it's centuries-long emergence from Roman rule, turned England into Great Britain through a heady mixture of guile, guts, and British steel(How's that for rhetoric?). It's a great book, as are most of Erickson's titles.
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