Thomas Penn was born in 1974. He has a PhD in early Tudor history from Clare College, Cambridge. Winter King is his first book.
A brilliant debut ... this impressive book will certainly become
the definitive study of our strangest, most mysterious, king
*BBC History Magazine*
Stunning ... effortlessly vivid prose ... a revelation. [Penn's]
focus is on the last, fear-filled decade of [Henry VII's] reign,
but his sinuously coiling chapters seamlessly unfold the past as
well as the present of his protagonists ... [He] has pulled off a
rare feat: a brilliant and haunting evocation of the Tudor world,
with irresistible echoes of the age of fear in which we now
live
*Telegraph*
[A] brilliant mash-up of gothic horror and political biography ...
a tour de force: both scholarly and a pleasure to read, covering
the breadth of the European political scene, while providing the
details that allow us to feel intimately the terror at home
*Spectator*
Remarkable ... Penn brilliantly recreates the sterile atmosphere
suffocating Henry's England. His eye for time, circumstance and the
telling anecdote is keen. Winter King offers us the fullest,
deepest, most compelling insight into the warped psychology of the
Tudor dynasty's founder to have appeared since Bacon wrote
*Financial Times*
[Thomas Penn] is a superb teller of a tale, a reveller in dodgy
deeds, a keen observer of the febrile, dissimulating characters of
court and embassy, and a splendid limner of the great jousts and
entertainments of the age ... with a sharp eye for detail and
adroit use of a gifted historical imagination, ... he lets us hear
the creak of oars and the scratch of pens, as well as the
tubercular king fighting for every breath ... Vigorous and
thoroughly enjoyable
*Economist*
I feel like I've been waiting to read this book a long time ... a
fluent and compelling account ... The level of detail is
fascinating and beautifully judged ... I think that, for the first
time, a writer has made me feel what contemporaries felt as Henry
VII's reign drew to an end; the relief, the hope, the sudden
buoyancy
*Hilary Mantel, author of 'Wolf Hall'*
Succeeds brilliantly ... [a] finely drawn portrait ... Penn's deft
turn of phrase superbly re-creates the drama and personalities of
the court
*Sunday Times*
An exceptionally stylish literary debut. Henry VII may be the most
unlikely person ever to have occupied the throne of England, and
his biographers have rarely conveyed just what a weird man he was.
Thomas Penn does this triumphantly, and in the process manages to
place his subject in a vividly realised landscape. His book should
be the first port of call for anyone trying to understand England's
most flagrant usurper since William the Conqueror
*Diarmaid MacCulloch*
A definitive and accessible account of the reign of Henry VII that
will alter our view not just of Henry, but of the country he
dominated and corrupted, and of the dynasty he founded ... [Penn's]
point is to show that this is not the "merrie England" of the Tudor
myth, but a country forced under the rule of a new king, spied on
and policed for any sign of disloyalty, and tyrannised by the use
of ancient half-forgotten fines and taxes
*Observer*
[Penn] achieves the remarkable feat of making the reign of Henry
VII seem more interesting than that of his son. Winter King is well
titled: the fingers of the first Tudor king, in Penn's account of
his final years, are icy to the touch, and probe into every nook
and cranny of the kingdom ... gripping and unexpected
*Guardian*
Penn's scholarly and engrossing life of Henry VII ... gives a
complex and exact sense of how power worked in early modern
England
*Spectator (Books of the Year 2012)*
Henry VII had a childhood on the run and a fragile claim to the crown but ruled England for nearly a quarter--century. The research into the players is intricate and multifaceted, and Penn paints a detailed picture of court life with its insecurity, conspiracy, intrigue, diplomacy, and politics at the highest levels where the stakes were one's head. Europe at the dawn of the 16th century was rife with plots and shifting allegiances that, ultimately, led to Henry VIII's reign. Simon Vance's rich tenor voice and English accent take listeners back to the era. -VERDICT A must-read for any student of British History. ["Penn holds a Ph.D. in medieval history from Clare College, Cambridge University. Not just for diehard historians, as this publisher would be aiming for a broad reach," read the review of the S. & S. hc, LJ 10/15/11.-Ed.]-Scott R. -DiMarco, Mansfield Univ. of Pennsylvania Lib. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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