Thursday, March 21, 2013

Mary Queen of Scotland & the Isles

Mary Queen of Scotland & the Isles
 by Margaret George




 Imagine what it would be like to be crowned a Queen when you are only 8 days old, your cousin is the most powerful monarch in the world and you are next in line to succeed her. Sounds great right? This was the reality for Mary Stuart – better known today as Mary, Queen of Scots. 

                 Mary Queen of Scotland & the Isles, by Margaret George, is a story based on Mary’s life from her birth in 1542 until her death in 1587. Although the book is technically fiction, it is deeply rooted in historical fact. The lives of the Stuart monarchs, just like Tudor predecessors, are often more dramatic and juicy than today’s daytime soap-operas. For clarification on the family lineage, see the images at the bottom of the post for the family tree.

 Mary’s father was King James V of Scotland, and her mother was Marie de Guise – one of the most powerful families in France during the 16th Century. Mary’s grandmother, Margaret Tudor, was Henry VIII’s sister which set Mary in line for the English throne since none of Henry’s own children had provided an heir to the throne. After England raided Scotland in 1548, the young Mary Stuart was forced to flee for France where she was raised alongside her betrothed, the Dauphin Francois, according to the Catholic tradition. Her upbringing was under close watch by the de Guise family. In 1561, she returned to Scotland which had become a Protestant country under the leadership of John Knox. Will Mary be able to re-claim her status as Queen of Scotland and the Isles?  


Europe was wrought by religious strife in the 16th Century as the battle between Catholicism and Protestantism caused bloodshed and political discord. Throughout her life Mary would be hailed as a saint, denounced as a whore, and ultimately accused of murdering her second husband, Lord Darnley (Henry Stuart), in order to marry her lover the Earl of Bothwell (James Hepburn). She was only twenty-five years old when she was forced to flee her home in Scotland, hoping to find sanctuary in Elizabeth Tudor’s England. Instead of refuge, Mary found herself accused of being embroiled in conspiracy until she was ultimately beheaded in 1587.

 The novel examines these turbulent times through the perspective of Mary Stuart, as if you have a way to read what she thought and how she felt throughout her life. Why did she get married three times? Was it difficult for her to leave her baby James, the future King of England and Scotland, to be raised by Protestants? Did she participate in the plot to murder her baby’s father, Lord Darnley? What was it like to be a Catholic monarch during a time when almost her entire country was devoted to Protestantism? How did it feel to know that her own cousin had ordered her imprisonment, and ultimately, her execution? 

 Raised among the most privileged people in the French court, then returned to Scotland to rule as a Catholic monarch in a strongly Protestant country, then executed after almost 20 years of imprisonment in Queen Elizabeth’s England, Queen Mary Stuart lived a life like no other, and Margaret George intertwines the facts into a stunning work of historical fiction.



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