Anne Somerset’s scholarly work on Elizabeth I is the historical biography I respect the most. I purchased this one because it was by her and was a bit surprised to read the segment of a review on the front cover “a naughty knickers version of our island story.” I was worried about what I would find, but after reading the introduction, I was reassured. Anne was still at her scholarly best: here is an excerpt from the beginning of her introduction.
To renounce the court entailed the renunciation of all worldly ambitions, and
involved besides foregoing the company of all but social inferiors, losing touch
with developments in fasion and art, and more often than not, living in seclusion
on a remote estate. It was not a decision to be taken lightly.
David Starkey has mentioned, you need to add some juicy gossip materials to history to make it appealing to the masses—okay, I understand that but he can ‘sell out’ not Anne! Well, rest assured she didn’t. Yes, there were time periods in the English royal history where the ladies-in-waiting were there as fodder for the royal appetites which Anne does not blush to cover—never in a sensationalist manner. The only true negative was I felt, once or twice, Anne lost touch with the idea of this being about the ladies-in-waiting and focused too much on other players at Court. Overall a great book using numerous primary sources and certainly portraying the character of each Court.