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The Last Plantagenets

The Last Plantagenets

List Price: $45.95
Your Price: $30.33
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Heroism and evil in the Wars of the Roses
Review: A decent book on the historical period which took place in England from the reign of Richard II to Richard III. Not as breathtaking as other Costain titles, this nevertheless was entertaining and very thorough in its section on Richard II. Unfortunately, this takes up half the book, and the rest of the Henries and Edward IV and Dickon are given short shrift.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Last Word
Review: Costain once again demonstrates he is a master storyteller and has a knack for infusing life into what could be a dreary story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Last Plantagenets
Review: English History at it's finest. You feel as if you are there with these people, living their lives. Always in good form, this is one of Costain's best.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good historian; good storyteller
Review: Mr. Costain is a very good historian. His scholarship is thorough and his conclusions are always logically wrought and sometimes surprising. His sensibilities are surprisingly contemporary, although I would not term him a "revisionist," (he wrote this history in the 1950s). For example, in his defense of Richard III (in this, the final book in this four-volume history) he travails against conventional opinion to demonstrate why King Richard was, indeed, not the Richard III of Thomas More as popularized by Shakespeare and held true to this day. And in the first volume, the author dashes myth and idle folklore to side with those historians who portray Eleanor of Aquitaine as the wise and effective check on Henry II and her sons that, she no doubt was. In so doing he disperses, through well-reasoned argument, the rumors and "Entertainment-Tonight" kind of fluff (History-Lite) that many still believe. I had been told these four volumes were classics. After reading them, but without being a scholar of history, I think those critical readers might be right. Certainly, Mr. Costain opened my eyes to a different kind of history telling, one in which an historian does not hesitate to conjecture or opine openly and to honestly make his case and then leave it for a reader's judgement. From front to back, from first through fourth volumes, this is a valuable and pleasurable experience. Mr Costain, presents, argues, harangues convention and, always entertains with a use of the language that is as sharp as his reasoning and as precise as his scholarship. Mr. Costain is a very good story-teller.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Brilliant and addicting
Review: The last installment of the "A History of the Plantagenents" succeeds admirably. Costain has a way of transferring is love and excitement of a subject onto his pages. It's a method that has yet to be rivaled. He gives each character a distinct personality no matter how trivial. William Caxton being a prime example. About half the book is concentrated on Richard II, which is fine because most historians either concentrate on the Black Prince or Henry V and skip over him. Here we see a sympathetic monarch who was easily bullied and who made some bad decisions early in his reign. After Richard II, he continues on through the kings until Richard III. Here he breaks protocol and gives evidence in defense of Shakespeare hunchback, citing Tudor propaganda as the catalyst. Normally, Costain is careful to present detailed accounts of both sides to an arguement, but here he takes a stance. It is quite refreshing and readers will eat it up. Highly recommended as well as the others in the series. My uncle gave me these books and I plan on returning the favor when the next generation comes my way. Treasure these.


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