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The Reckoning: A Novel (Welsh Princes Trilogy Book 3) Kindle Edition
"Penman's characters are so shrewdly imagined, so full of resonant human feeling that they seem to breathe on the page." —San Francisco Chronicle
"Never forget, Llewelyn, that the world's greatest fool is a Welshman who trusts an English king."
His father's words haunt Llewelyn ap Gruffydd, Prince of Wales, who has been ruling uneasily over his fractious countrymen. Above all else, Llewelyn fears that his life and his own dream—of an independent, united Wales—might be lost to Edward I's desire to expand his English empire.
Alive from the pages of history, this is the hauntingly beautiful and compelling tale of a game poised to play itself out to its bloody finale as English and Welsh cross swords in a reckoning that must mean disaster for one side or the other.
For anyone who has ever wanted to experience the rich tapestry of British history and lore, this bold and romantic adventure must be read.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSt. Martin's Griffin
- Publication dateApril 14, 2009
- File size1.2 MB
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Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
- Linda Vretos, West Springfield High School, VA
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
- Ellen Kaye Stoppel, Drake Univ. Law Lib., Des Moines
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Review
“A first-rate historical novel.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Packed with bold adventure, high romance, and large characters whose acts of bravery, self-sacrifice, brutality and treachery are part of history.” —James Goldman, author of The Lion in Winter
“Full of brawling and plotting, murder and revenge and betrayal. . . . Another triumph for Penman.” —The Seattle Times
From the Publisher
It is in these Staff Recommend sections that I kept on seeing our Penman's titles, HERE BE DRAGONS, FALLS THE SHADOW, THE RECKONING and also SUNNE IN SPLENDOUR and WHEN CHRIST AND HIS SAINTS SLEPT.
It's funny, you can sell something for years before you notice that the author has been quietly making a powerful impact on people everywhere.
I started with HERE BE DRAGONS and I have never looked back. Her trilogy of the decline of the Welsh kings ( DRAGON, FALLS THE SHADOW and THE RECKONING)is a holiday gift I give year after year, and I'm happy to say they have always been embraced and loved. From my 15 year old niece to my 70 year old mother and many ages in between, all readers are enchanted and transported to a land and an age gone forever. But Penman makes them live forever in our minds and hearts with fantastic, unforgettable characters and wonderful history. HERE BE DRAGONS is such a great title--medieval mapmakes would write those words across any part of the map that was unknown.. a wonderful metaphor for how little the Welsh and English knew of each other.
SUNNE IN SPLENDOUR--Warning: This is not Shakespeare's Richard III. In this novel, Richard is a victim of circumstance and man vilified by the Tudors, but here presented as a decent and normal man, a man of conscience.
AND he is not a murderer. Yes, those princes did die, but not by Richard's hand.
WHEN CHRIST AND HIS SAINTS SLEPT
Another wonderful title, for it refers to the 15 years of England's darkest time-the civil war between the cousins Queen Maud and King Steven. England was deserted, for Christ and his saints were sleeping. I had never even heard of these royals. Queen Maud was the legitimate heir to the throne, but a woman, and there fore not fit to rule. She is also the mother of Henry, who later married Eleanor of Aquitaine . Pretty heady stuff, more incredible men and women, another book to get totally lost in.
Although it has been years since all these books were first published, I can name 5 stores I have been in in the past 3 months that have one of these titles in the Staff Recommends section.
-Alice Kesterson, Ballantine Regional Sales Manger
From the Inside Flap
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
Here, alive from the pages of history, is the compelling tale of a Celtic society ruled by Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, on a collison course with a feudal realm of Edward I. WIth this last book in the extraordinary trilogy that began with HERE BE DRAGONS and continued in FALLS THE SHADOW, Sharon Kay Penman has written a beautiful and moving conclusion to her medieval saga. For everyone who has read the earlier books in this incomparable series or ever wanted to experience the rich tapestry of British history and lore, this bold and romantic adventure must be read.
From the Back Cover
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
Here, alive from the pages of history, is the compelling tale of a Celtic society ruled by Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, on a collison course with a feudal realm of Edward I. WIth this last book in the extraordinary trilogy that began with HERE BE DRAGONS and continued in FALLS THE SHADOW, Sharon Kay Penman has written a beautiful and moving conclusion to her medieval saga. For everyone who has read the earlier books in this incomparable series or ever wanted to experience the rich tapestry of British history and lore, this bold and romantic adventure must be read.
About the Author
For many years while she was a student and then a tax lawyer, Sharon Kay Penman (1945-2021) worked on a novel about the life of Richard III and The War of the Roses. After the original manuscript was stolen from her car, Penman rewrote the entire novel that would become The Sunne in Splendour.
Penman is the author of ten critically acclaimed and New York Times best selling historical novels and four medieval mysteries featuring Justin de Quincy. The first book in the series, The Queen's Man, was a finalist for an Edgar Award for Best First Mystery from the Mystery Writers of America.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Reckoning
By Sharon Kay PenmanSt. Martin's Press
Copyright © 1991 Sharon Kay PenmanAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-312-38247-6
Contents
1 Evesham Abbey, England,2 Montargis, France,
3 Siena, Tuscany,
4 Montargis, France,
5 Talamone, the Maremma, Tuscany,
6 Acre, Kingdom Of Jerusalem,
7 Castell Y Bere, Wales,
8 Melun, France,
9 Talerddig Grange, Powys, Wales,
10 Rhuddlan Castle, Wales,
11 Montargis, France,
12 The English Channel, Off the Coast of Cornwall,
13 The Cog Holy Cross, Off the Isles of Scilly,
14 Bristol, England,
15 Corfe Castle, England,
16 Worcester, England,
17 Windsor Castle, England,
18 Aberconwy Abbey, Wales,
19 Basingwerk Abbey, Wales,
20 Rhuddlan Castle, Wales,
21 Westminster, England,
22 Windsor Castle, England,
23 Worcester, England,
24 Abbey of Aberconwy, Wales,
25 Abereiddon, Wales,
26 Sherborne Castle, Dorsetshire, England,
27 Hafod-Y-Llan, Nanhwynain, Wales,
28 Dolwyddelan, Wales,
29 Llanfaes, Wales,
30 Llanfaes, Wales,
31 Taunton Castle, England,
32 Aber, Wales,
33 Aber, Wales,
34 Aber, Wales,
35 Aber, Wales,
36 Cwm-Hir Abbey, Wales,
37 Dolwyddelan, Wales,
38 Paris, France,
39 Shrewsbury, England,
40 Shrewsbury, England,
Afterword,
Author's Note,
Acknowledgments,
CHAPTER 1
Evesham Abbey, England
January 1271
There were no stars. The sky was the color of cinders, and shadows were spilling out of every corner. Brother Damian was truly content with his lot in life, but border winters were brutal, and he sometimes found it hard to reconcile his monk's vow of poverty with his subversive yearning for a woolen mantle luxuriously lined with fox fur. Folklore held that St Hilary's Day was the coldest of the year, but he doubted that it could be as frigid as this first Friday in January, a day that had begun in snow and was ending now in this frozen twilight dusk, in swirling sleet and ice-edged gusting wind, sharp as any blade.
He had reached the dubious shelter of the cloisters when a snowball grazed his cheek, splattered against the nearest pillar. Damian stumbled, slipped on the glazed walkway, and went down. His assailants rushed to his rescue and he was soon encircled by dismayed young faces. With recognition, the boys' apologies became less anxious, more heartfelt, for Damian was a favorite of theirs. They often wished that he, rather than the dour Brother Gerald, was master of the novices, as Damian was young enough himself to wink at their indiscretions, understanding how bumpy was the road from country lad to reluctant scholar. Now he scolded them roundly as they helped him to his feet and retrieved his spilled candles, but his rebuke lacked sting; when he tallied up sins, he found no room on the list for snowball fights.
His duty done, Damian felt free to jest about poor marksmanship before sending them back to their studies. They crowded in, jockeying for position, warming him with their grins, imploring him to tell them again of the great Earl Simon and the battle of Evesham, fought within sight of the abbey's walls. Damian was not deceived, as able as the next man to recognize a delaying tactic. But it was a ploy he could never resist, and when they entreated him to tell the story "just one more time, for Jack," a freckle-faced newcomer to their ranks, he let himself be persuaded.
Five years had passed since the Earl of Leicester had found violent death and martyrdom on a bloody August morn, but his memory was still green. Evesham cherished its own saint, caring naught that Simon de Montfort had not been — and would likely never be — canonized by the Church. No pope or cardinal would antagonize the English Crown by sanctifying the Earl's rebellion as the holy quest he'd believed it to be. It was the English people — craftsmen and widows and village priests and shire gentry — who had declared him blessed, who flocked to his grave in faithful numbers, who defied Church and King to do reverence to a French-born rebel, who did not forget.
Evesham suffered from no dearth of de Montfort partisans. Some of the more knowing of the boys had concluded that if every man who claimed to have fought with the Earl that day had in fact done so, de Montfort would never have lost. But Damian's de Montfort credentials were impeccable, for all knew he had actually engaged the great Earl in conversation before the battle, that he had then dared to make his way alone to Dover Castle, determined to give the Earl's grieving widow an account of his last hours. Damian not only believed in the de Montfort legend, he had lived it, and the boys listened raptly as he shared with them his memories, his remembered pain.
So real was it still to Damian that as he spoke, the cold seemed to ebb away, and the boys began to breathe in humid August air that foretold a coming storm. They saw the Earl and his men ride into the abbey so that the captive King Henry might hear Mass. They experienced the rebel army's joy that salvation was at hand, for the Earl's second son — young Simon, known to friends and foes alike as Bran — was on his way from Kenilworth Castle with a vast army. And they shuddered and groaned when Damian told them that Bran had tarried too long, that through his lack of care, his men were ambushed by the King's son. Flying Bran's captured banners, the Lord Edward had swept down upon Evesham, and by the time Earl Simon discovered the ruse, it was too late. Trapped between Edward's advancing army and the river, he and his men had ridden out to die.
"Earl Simon knew they were doomed, but his faith never faltered. He told his men that their cause was just, that a king should not be accountable only to God. 'The men of England will cherish their liberties all the more,' he said, 'knowing that we died for them.'" Damian's voice trailed off. There was a somber silence, broken at last by one of the younger lads, wanting to know if it was true that the Earl had been hideously maimed by his enemies. It was a question Damian had often been asked, but it was not one he found easy to answer — even now. He hesitated and a young voice came from the shadows.
"They hacked off Earl Simon's head and his private male parts, dispatched them as keepsakes to Roger de Mortimer's wife. His arms and legs were chopped off, too, sent to towns that had favored the Earl, and his mangled corpse was thrown to the dogs. Brother Damian retrieved what was left of the Earl's body, carried it on a ladder into the church, and buried it before the High Altar. But even then the Earl's enemies were not satisfied. They dug his body up, buried him in unhallowed ground. It was only after Simon's son Amaury appealed to the Pope that we were able to give the Earl a decent Christian burial."
It was a grisly account, but none thought to challenge it, for the speaker was another who had reason to be well versed in the de Montfort mythology; Hugh de Whitton's father had died fighting for Simon on that rain-drenched Evesham field.
Damian gave Hugh a grateful glance, then sent them off to wash up before supper. He was not surprised when Hugh lingered, offering to help him carry his candles to the sacristy. Of all the boys who lived at the abbey, both novices and students, none were as generous, as open-hearted as Hugh. Damian was very fond of him, and he grieved for the bleakness of the boy's future. For a lad of fourteen, he'd had more than his share of sorrows. His mother had died giving birth to a stillborn son when he was just four; he'd been but nine at the time of his father's battlefield death, and there were none to redeem his sire's forfeit lands. A cousin was found who'd grudgingly agreed to pay for the boy's education, but now that he was in his fifteenth year, the payments had ceased. Damian knew that the Abbot could not keep the lad on indefinitely. Nor would he stay once he realized his presence had become a charity, for Hugh was as proud as he was impoverished. Damian was by nature an optimist, but even he had few illusions as to what lay ahead for Hugh. Landless orphans did not often prosper, even in the best of times.
As they headed for the church, Hugh shortened his stride to match the monk's. He might lack for earthly possessions, but not for stature; he was already taller than many men, and his long legs, loose-gaited walk, and broadening shoulders gave promise of even more impressive growth to come. Now he studied Damian through long, fair lashes, blue eyes shadowed with sudden doubts.
Nothing he'd heard this eve was unfamiliar; he knew the history of the de Montforts as if they were his own family. The Earl, a highborn lord who'd championed the commons, a legend even in his lifetime, arrogant and gallant and hot-tempered and reckless, a man who'd preferred death to dishonor. His Countess, the Lady Nell, forced to choose between her brother the King and her husband, forced into French exile after Evesham. Their five sons. Harry, who'd died with his father, and Guy, who'd survived only by the grace of God. Bran, who had to live with a guilt beyond anything Hugh could imagine. Amaury, the priest, and Richard, dead in France. Ellen, the only daughter, who was to have wed a Prince.
Hugh felt as if he knew them all. But his thoughts now were not of the beguiling, tragic de Montforts; it was Damian, his friend, for whom he feared. "The old King hated Earl Simon as if he were the veritable Antichrist," he said hesitantly. "And all know how wroth the Lord Edward is that men have taken the Earl's memory so to heart, that they make pilgrimages to his grave and speak of miracles, of children healed and fevers broken. Is it not dangerous, then, Brother Damian, to speak out so plainly? Not even the Lord Edward could deny Earl Simon's courage. But when you talk of his desire for reforms, when you say he was right to seize the government, is there not a risk that evil- minded men might missay you, might even claim you speak treason?"
Damian was touched by the youngster's concern. "There is some truth in what you say, lad. But King Henry is no great threat these days, addled by his age and his failures. And the Lord Edward, whilst undeniably formidable, is absent from the realm. Crusades can last for years; who knows when he might return to England?"
"I was thinking of a danger closer at hand — the Earl of Gloucester. Who hates Earl Simon more than Gloucester? A man always despises one he betrays, does he not?"
Damian gave Hugh an approving smile; the lad was learning fast. "You are right. That Judas Gloucester does indeed harbor great hatred for his former allies, for all who bear the name de Montfort. I may well be foolhardy for speaking out as I do. But I cannot keep silent, Hugh. That is all I can do for Earl Simon now, seek to make sure he is not forgotten."
Ahead loomed the abbey church, a massive silhouette against the darkening sky. The nave was lit only by Damian's lantern, but as they detoured around the rood screen, they could see a glimmer of light coming from the choir. Damian was not surprised to find a man standing before Simon de Montfort's grave stone; rarely a day passed without pilgrims to this illicit shrine.
"I am sorry, but you must go now," he said kindly. "It is nigh on time for Vespers. You may stay for the service if you wish; lay people are permitted in the nave."
The man did not answer. He was uncommonly tall, shrouded in a long, snow-splattered mantle, and there was something disconcerting about his silence, his utter stillness in the shadows. Damian felt a faint prickling of unease. To combat it, he stepped forward boldly, raising his lantern. His candle's flame flared, giving Hugh a glimpse of a dark hawk's face, cheekbones high and hollowed, eyes the shade of smoke, not a face to be forgotten. But then Damian's light faltered; the lantern slipped from fingers suddenly numbed, would have plunged to the ground had Hugh not snatched it up. He turned, wondering, close enough to hear the monk's ragged, indrawn breath.
"My lord Earl!" Damian stumbled backward, groping for his crucifix. The man took a quick step forward, reaching out. Damian recoiled from his touch, then whirled, fled the choir.
Hugh was no less frightened. He believed implicitly in spirits and the supernatural, but had never expected to encounter an apparition himself. He was ready to bolt, too, when the man cried, "Wait!" The voice was low, husky, managed both to command and to entreat. Hugh hesitated; although he did not think the Earl's spectre would do him harm, there was terror in any confrontation with the unknown. He had begun to back away when his lantern spilled light onto the tiles, onto the crimson droplets trickling down Earl Simon's grave stone. It was an eerie sight, fraught with sinister significance, should have triggered headlong flight. But Hugh's superstitions were diluted by a healthy dose of country common sense. Ghosts do not bleed. Unthinkingly, he blurted that out aloud, and the corner of the stranger's mouth twitched.
"No," he said, "they do not ..." Hugh darted forward, catching him as he staggered, sank down upon the altar steps. "The monk," he gasped, "stop him from giving the alarm ..."
"I will," Hugh promised, "I will!" There was blood now upon his own mantle, too. He gently disengaged the other's hold upon his arm. "I'll find him, never fear!"
Damian's panic had taken him only as far as the nave. Once he realized that Hugh had not followed, he was nerving himself to return for the lad when Hugh lurched into the rood screen. "Brother Damian, hurry! He needs our help, is bleeding badly!" Grabbing Damian's sleeve, Hugh tugged urgently, impatiently. "'Tis no ghost, I swear! Not Earl Simon, his son!"
Damian was greatly relieved, but discomfited, too. Flushed and breathless, he bent over the injured man, devoting more attention to "the remarkable resemblance, verily Lord Simon's image" than to the makeshift bandage, the blood welling between Hugh's fingers. Fortunately for Simon's son, Hugh had a cooler head in a crisis. It was he who reminded them that Vespers was nigh, and, at his suggestion, they assisted the wounded man into the sacristy. Damian's embarrassment had yet to fade; it manifested itself now in a reluctance to be alone with his spurious saint, and when Hugh moved back into the choir, he made excuse to follow.
There he found Hugh dipping an altar cloth in the holy-water font. He should have rebuked the boy. Instead, he whispered, "Which son?"
"Bran," Hugh said without hesitation, although he could not have explained how he knew, only that he did. Wringing out the cloth, he hastened back into the sacristy, Damian at his heels.
Bran was slumped upon a wooden bench, eyes closed. He didn't move, even when Hugh began to unwind his bloodied bandage. Much to the boy's relief, the wound he exposed did not appear life-threatening: a jagged sword slash across the ribs. "You've lost a lot of blood, my lord, but the cut should heal well enough as long as no proud flesh forms."
Bran opened his eyes at that. "You are young to be a leech," he said, and smiled.
Hugh blushed, mumbled that he had oft-times aided Brother Mark in the infirmary. Then, realizing that he was being teased, he relaxed somewhat, and ventured to ask how Bran had come to be wounded.
Bran shrugged, winced. "My ship dropped anchor in Bristol harbor three days ago. I had no trouble until I reached Tewkesbury, where I had the bad luck to be recognized by two of Gloucester's knights. I fought my way free, but ..." He shrugged again, then glanced from Hugh to Damian, back to Hugh. "I was more fortunate at Evesham, for here I found friends," he said, and Hugh flushed anew, this time with pleasure.
Damian held up a hand for silence. "I thought I heard footsteps in the nave. My lord, you are in grave danger. By now Gloucester's men will have raised a hue and cry, and it would be easy enough to guess where you were headed. You dare not stay here, lest you be taken."
Bran nodded. "I know. But I had to come ..."
Hugh nodded, too. He understood perfectly why Bran should have taken such a mad risk, and was ready to perform miracles in order to save Simon de Montfort's son. "Mayhap we can hide him in the stables," he implored Damian, but the monk was already shaking his head.
"They'd find him, lad. No, he must get farther away, but I doubt he can ride —"
"I can ride," Bran interrupted, with a grim resolve that carried such conviction that they no longer doubted. "If I can reach the border, I'll be safe enough in Wales."
"For certes, Wales!" Damian marveled he hadn't thought of it, for the powerful Welsh Prince, Llewelyn ap Gruffydd, had been Simon de Montfort's most steadfast ally, betrothed to Simon's daughter, Ellen. Llewelyn had disavowed the plight troth after Simon's defeat, for royal marriages were based upon pragmatic considerations of statecraft, not sentiment. But Llewelyn had maintained his friendship with the de Montforts, and Damian was sure he would willingly extend his protection to Simon's son. How could Bran manage so perilous a journey, though, weak as he was?
That had occurred to Hugh, too. "You'll need a guide. Let it be me!"
Bran sat up, studying the boy's eager face. "I accept your offer right gladly, lad, but only if you understand the risks."
Hugh's grin was radiant enough to light the way into Wales. "I do, I swear I do!" Whirling upon Damian when the monk gave a smothered sound of protest: "Brother Damian, do not object, I beg you! A fortnight, that is all I'll be gone!"
Damian knew that to let Hugh go was madness. But when he started to refuse, he found the words wouldn't come. Mayhap this was meant to be. "I shall pray for you both," he said. "May you go with God."
(Continues...)Excerpted from The Reckoning by Sharon Kay Penman. Copyright © 1991 Sharon Kay Penman. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B004GKMMT2
- Publisher : St. Martin's Griffin; First edition (April 14, 2009)
- Publication date : April 14, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 1.2 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 610 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0312382472
- Best Sellers Rank: #425,887 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I am an American of Irish-English-Welsh heritage, and I currently live in New Jersey, although many of my readers imagine I am happily dwelling upon a Welsh mountaintop--but no such luck. I was once a tax lawyer, which I looked upon as penance for my sins. Like most writers, I was born with a love of the written word, although I never expected to be able to support myself as a writer; when you read about starving artists in their garrets, most of them have starving writers as roommates. But I was very lucky and I have been blessed to make my living as a writer for the past thirty-seven years or so, and to find readers on both sides of the Atlantic. I have lived in Yorkshire and Wales to research two of my books--The Sunne in Splendour and Here be Dragons-- and am published in the U.K. as Sharon Penman, without the middle name, Kay, that I use in the United States. All of my novels--fourteen at last count--are set in the Middle Ages, and focus upon England's most colorful dynasty, the Plantagenets. It is almost as if they lived their dramatic and often wildly improbable lives with future historical novelists in mind, and I am very grateful to them--especially to the Angevins,Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine and their equally famous children, known to their contemporaries as the Devil's Brood.
PS I added a few new photos recently but could find no way to add captions. So this is the best I can do. The swordsman showing me how to use a medieval sword is a friend and fellow writer, David Blixt, who is also a very talented actor; when this photo was taken, he'd just put on a remarkable demonstration of swordplay at the Historical Novel Society convention. And the photo of me on that bench was taken by my Australian friend, Paula Mildenhall, at a French winery on our Eleanor of Aquitaine Tour, which was one of the most memorable experiences of my life.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story compelling and well-written. They describe the books as an enjoyable read with wonderful descriptions. Readers appreciate the memorable characters and their humanistic portrayal. The emotional content is heartfelt and moving, with tear-jerking moments. The research quality is praised as thorough and interesting, bringing history to life.
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Customers find the story engaging and well-written. They appreciate how the author weaves history into the narrative, making it better than fiction. The characters are described as compelling and the historical context is kept true. Readers find the trilogy more captivating than the Plantagenet series, captivated by the story of Wales and England as divided countries fighting each other.
"...She brings to life the thoughts, joys, and fears of people who lived almost 800 years ago and allows the reader to live through their days as if we..." Read more
"...A superb conclusion to a tumultuous and possibly lesser known period of history, I cannot recommend this series (or any of Penman’s novels) highly..." Read more
"Riviting story, well written. Looking towards the next instalment. Honestly, a minimum word limit? Enough now, no more words...." Read more
"I love well done historical fiction and this series is very well done...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and enjoyable to read. They describe it as one of their favorite sets of books. While some readers found the story intense at times, they found the overall experience satisfying.
"...She brings to life the thoughts, joys, and fears of people who lived almost 800 years ago and allows the reader to live through their days as if we..." Read more
"...and religiosity, the story is also laced with romance, honour, adventure (including pirates!) and betrayal...." Read more
"...Good work, Ms. Penman!" Read more
"Interesting history of Wales brought forth by an excellent writer. A great introduction to Welsh history and English interaction in Wales." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's writing quality. They find it well-written with engaging characters and descriptions of their lives. The book is easy to read and a must-read until the end. While some details are familiar and clichéd, others are plausible.
"...is that by this period in history there is less distinction between Norman and English, with the two integrating somewhat to become the 'new'..." Read more
"Riviting story, well written. Looking towards the next instalment. Honestly, a minimum word limit? Enough now, no more words...." Read more
"...I would highly recommend this series as well written, well researched and with characters well developed and worth knowing. Good work, Ms. Penman!" Read more
"Interesting history of Wales brought forth by an excellent writer. A great introduction to Welsh history and English interaction in Wales." Read more
Customers enjoy the characters' development. They find the characters memorable, human, and realistic. The author keeps them alive with historical truths while putting a fictional spin on them. They love the sub characters like Hugh. The novel includes real people, places, and events, and brings female characters to life. It continues the story of powerful leaders of Upper Wales and their interactions in war. Readers appreciate the insight into medieval men's minds and consider it great reading for those with Welsh ancestry.
"...As is usual with Penman’s work, she brings the female characters (those often diminished or elided by history) particularly to life, representing..." Read more
"...this series as well written, well researched and with characters well developed and worth knowing. Good work, Ms. Penman!" Read more
"Interesting history of Wales brought forth by an excellent writer. A great introduction to Welsh history and English interaction in Wales." Read more
"Riveting. Based on a true story but also has fictional characters. A must- read." Read more
Customers find the emotional content moving and heart-wrenching. They describe it as resonant with human emotions like grief, joy, and tragedy. The book is described as passionate and an excellent conclusion to a tumultuous period of history.
"...A superb conclusion to a tumultuous and possibly lesser known period of history, I cannot recommend this series (or any of Penman’s novels) highly..." Read more
"This one was definitely the most emotional book out of the trilogy - actually, it's the most emotional SKP book I've read yet...." Read more
"Beautiful, sweeping, heart-wrenching...." Read more
"...The deaths of leading characters, and unhappy endings are history, not just shock for dramatic effect...." Read more
Customers find the book's research quality good. They say it's well-researched and presented in an engaging way. The author's painstaking research brings history alive, and her imagination breathes life into the characters. Readers describe the book as interesting and a wonderful method of learning history without being bored. They appreciate the extensive bibliography and list of contributors. Overall, readers mention the book is a great way to learn history without being boring.
"...relationship with is brother, the complex Davyd, are all explored in wonderful, deep and moving ways...." Read more
"...I would highly recommend this series as well written, well researched and with characters well developed and worth knowing. Good work, Ms. Penman!" Read more
"...to both English and Welsh happenings (by date), which are infinitely researched and sincere to lavish detail of the times...." Read more
"...It also has an extensive bibliography and list of contributors. Both books are available in selected libraries." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2012Sharon Kay Penman has an amazing talent for putting into words a wealth of human emotion. She brings to life the thoughts, joys, and fears of people who lived almost 800 years ago and allows the reader to live through their days as if we were there. This novel really struck a chord with me, perhaps because it is the final tale, the finale of Penman's Welsh trilogy that ended with the death of "Ein Llyw Olaf"-the Welsh for "Our Last Leader". I truly came to admire Llewelyn, just as I did his grandfather Llewelyn Fawr. In fact these two Llewelyns were my two favorite characters in the trilogy. Not that I didn't enjoy the second novel--'Falls the Shadow'--but this final installment and the first novel--'Here Be Dragons'--are definitely the two that resonate the most for me.
One of the best things about this novel is how Penman easily manages to span the length of Europe in her tale. We see the reaction to events from many different perspectives, thus allowing us a brilliant insight into politics at the time. Penman's attention to detail is superb, and the amount of research she does for her novels is remarkable. However, she is not an author who sacrifices her story in lieu of rigid factual accuracy. She balances the line between fact and fiction perfectly: creating a well-written novel whilst keeping as close as possible to historical events.
As much as I loved this book, I am left with an overwhelming feeling of despair. I am English, actually from Cheshire where some events in this novel take place, but of course the conquest of Wales saddens me. Medieval Europe was made up of such conquests, for example the Norman conquest of the English two hundred years prior to this novel. However what does strike me as remarkable is that by this period in history there is less distinction between Norman and English, with the two integrating somewhat to become the 'new' English race. Yet today Welsh is a nationality, and Welsh is still spoken. I like being British, and I love reading of Welsh, Scottish and English history, but I feel that it's ok to be proud your individual heritage too. A really interesting book is 'The Struggle for Mastery' which is a history of Britain from 1066 to 1284. It discusses not only historical events but also the concept of nationality and how people felt at the time. I am glad I read these two books close together, as I was able to more fully understand and appreciate the Welsh pride portrayed by Penman in this novel.
I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in Welsh history, but I also recommend that you read the trilogy in order for a better understanding of how events led up to this dramatic finish.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2013Sometimes, it’s really difficult reading the novels of a writer whom you know takes great pains to be historically accurate while still telling a sweeping, dramatic and emotionally fraught tale. So it is with Penman who, in this last book of The Welsh Prince series, brings the story of the struggles of the Welsh prince, Llewelwyn, and the machinations of Edward Longshanks, King of England, to a close.
For those who know the history, you understand the ending is not a happy one and it’s this that makes the novel difficult reading. The tale of Llewelyn’s reign, his marriage, love, triumphs and losses, his turgid and troubled relationship with is brother, the complex Davyd, are all explored in wonderful, deep and moving ways. Likewise, Edward’s motivations, the relationship he has with not only his brother and cousins, but also his conscience, which appears to conveniently massage events and consequences to suit his purpose, are all told with such emotional truth, you both delight and ache for the characters and the futures that await them.
I adored this book – as I have all the others in this series and, indeed, by Penman. She is a historical novelist par excellence – in that she manages to balance both the history and the story-telling so very well. Lost in the chaos and turmoil of the era, the bloodshed, treachery and religiosity, the story is also laced with romance, honour, adventure (including pirates!) and betrayal.
As is usual with Penman’s work, she brings the female characters (those often diminished or elided by history) particularly to life, representing them as strong, brave, fully-rounded women who while they may not be on the frontline in the physical sense as battles and politics rage around them, nonetheless form the backbone and emotional rearguard upon which their men (husbands, brothers, fathers, cousins and sons) will rely to succour them.
From Ellen to Eleanor to Nell, they are three-dimensional, amazing women who loved their men – faults and all – and in the end, it’s they who bear the heavy cost of their loyalty and love.
A superb conclusion to a tumultuous and possibly lesser known period of history, I cannot recommend this series (or any of Penman’s novels) highly enough.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2019Riviting story, well written. Looking towards the next instalment. Honestly, a minimum word limit? Enough now, no more words. The moment when you regret agreeing to leave feedback?
- Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2014I love well done historical fiction and this series is very well done. I fell in love with the characters and hated others, just as I did in reading their history in my long-ago college years. Even knowing outcomes for the characters, which I convince myself will help me deal with however the author chooses to write about those outcomes, brought tears to my eyes. I will admit, I'm Welsh and will never understand, even after more than 700 years, how the first son of the reigning monarch can be the "Prince of Wales" when he is NOT Welsh, or why on earth Wales is not its own principality, with at least the same distinctions as the further away Scotland; or why on earth England feels they have a right to a slice of Ireland (my Scots-Irish ire is showing), but regardless of my personal bias regarding those issues, I was extremely pleased with how well researched the writing was, how thorough the author was in pointing out those places she took literary license or where there was ambiguity in dates and places. I would highly recommend this series as well written, well researched and with characters well developed and worth knowing. Good work, Ms. Penman!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2024It took a long while to follow the story and all the characters and thus stay with it but after about half-way for me it all came together and was captivating.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2024Interesting history of Wales brought forth by an excellent writer. A great introduction to Welsh history and English interaction in Wales.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2024Riveting. Based on a true story but also has fictional characters. A must- read.
Top reviews from other countries
- trixie:Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 19, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
A brilliant read SKP's research is phenomenal.
The WelshPrinces trilogy is outstanding and a must read. You won't be disappointed
- SharonReviewed in Australia on March 7, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful for a History Buff
This is brilliant for every person that loves immersing themselves into history.
- susana pliegoReviewed in Mexico on July 6, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars In love with Sharon K. Penman's writing!
This trilogy was a fantastic adventure! from king John and Llywelyn Fawr to king Edward longshanks and Llywelyn the last, it's been a heart wrenching experience. The magistral writing of SKP in this books achieves greatness. She takes the reader inside the story as an spectator, one can be witness of great moments in history and at the same time of the very personal lives of its characters. I came to love so many characters in this books, that almost dreaded to read the author's note were she would reveal which were total creation, and it blows me away how she endowed them to the point that they could've existed!
Trough Sharon learned about R3 and came to appreciate him as a great leader and a great man. Trough this trilogy I have found another great leader, one to admire and love, one I didn't know about: Simon the Montfort. Will learn more about him and his great reforms, spectacular character, masterfully depicted here by Sharon.
There's, in my opinion, no better way of learning history that trough SKP writing. Had an special time, loved every second of it and will definitely read more of Sharon's books. Fortunately she has many more for me to enjoy. So I have a happy and long tread before me.
- NicolaiReviewed in Germany on September 2, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr gutes Buch, spannend bis zum Ende
Spanning the period 1271-83 A.D., The Reckoning focuses on the Welsh uprisings and their prince, Llewelyn ap Gruffydd. The story begins five years after the killing of Simon de Montfort, whose story was related in Penman's Falls the Shadow ( LJ 7/88). The betrothal between Simon's 13-year-old daughter Ellen and Llewelyn, which had ended with her father's death, has been reinstated. Now, en route to meet her husband, Ellen is kidnapped by pirates acting at the behest of Edward I, who opposes his cousin's marriage to the warring Welsh lord. The scene shifts from Wales to the scattered de Montforts living in France and Italy and to Edward's court. The action involves religious and political intrigue, battles and plots.
As with Penman's other historical novels, this one is both informative and enjoyable. Settings, events, and individuals are realistic. The players include well-researched historical personages and fictional characters.
- WoodyReviewed in Australia on January 31, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for historical fiction buffs
Sharon Penman really know her stuff and each and everyone of her books are hard to put down once started.