Read this initially when I was a senior in high school and absolutely loved it. Anne Boleyn was my favorite of Henry 8's wives because of this book. Re-reading it now with wiser, more adult eyes, I see Anne and Henry both as unhinged, each in a different way -- Henry, far more dangerously so. Still, just as Anne won over the crowd at the very end of her life, so also has Anthony by virtue of her skillful depiction won me all over again to Anne's side in spite of her faults.
I say this because so many people judge a book, in a juvenile way, on the basis of whether they like the main character or not. The fact that so many people do this is really driving me up the wall. Anne is not likable. She is vain, ambitious to the point of destroying other people, greedy for power, clever, witty, able to think like lightning, passionate, literate, intelligent -- in short, a gold mine full of personality. And Evelyn Anthony makes all of this come to life in a setting that might otherwise have been weighed down by all the costumes and castles and pomp. Anne is not someone you'd want to be your friend, or at least, if she were your friend, you would want to be very wary of her even as you admired her talents. But isn't it good to know this about someone? Isn't it good to become so acquainted with a character like this you know her inside and out, feel like you are living inside her? This is the true gift of fiction, which is that it allows us to experience what it is like to life live as someone else, someone dramatically NOT us, and in this case, someone who lived in a wildly different time and set of circumstances. Yet Anthony is so skilled, she made 16th century England recognizable territory. All the scheming and infighting and people struggling to step over one another reminded me forcibly of The Sopranos. I was left to conclude, this is what the pursuit of power does to people, whatever the environment. What an incredibly valuable thing to learn. And on top of all that, in addition to just plain telling a damn good story, Anthony made me respect the hell out of Anne Boleyn even as she showed me how she schemed her life away. That is an achievement.
All you readers who would ditch this book because Anne is not "nice" or "likable," you are missing out on LIFE.