I suspect it is not unusual for me to choose my reading from sources I have come to trust. Time is too precious to spend on a book that another might be even better at telling a similar story or covering similar ground. Law & Liberty Book Review is a common source for me here, and the decision to read this book came from a review by Helen Dale posted December 9, 2025. Now that I have finished this book, I reread her article, which was fun to do after emerging from the well-written story. Here is a snippet from Helen's review that explains the book well and why I agree it made for a good story and one that I learned a lot from:
“The process by which England and Scotland stopped fighting wars over both religion and questions of governance and decided to hold regular parliamentary elections about them instead is both a remarkable story and hard to write well. The period 1689-1725 is often considered too complex for narrative history: Rage of Party is its first treatment for a general audience.
Films and plays—let alone histories—that depend on ensemble casts and episodic plots can spin out of a writer’s control, so Owers does two things to keep his story straight. First, he focuses—much as a novelist would—on rounded portraits of major historical figures. You will never forget his Duke of Marlborough, his depictions of the Whig “junto” lords, or the financial wizard that was Sidney Godolphin. Secondly, he builds the book outwards from two extraordinary people who dominated the period: Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford—arguably our first prime minister—and the country’s monarch, Queen Anne. They provide a point around which every other figure pivots.”
In summary, this book (as is too often the case with good ones) makes me want to follow all kinds of related rabbit trails, and what I am left with is 10 more books I add to my want-to-read shelf, knowing full well that I may probably only get to 0, 1, or 2 before I meet our Maker.