![]() And Penman does a fantastic job of bring these people to life, 800 years later: all the little quirks of each of them are here, especially Henry's high energy and uncanny ability to travel hundreds of miles on horseback in short periods of time. It's the kind of dysfunctional family you only read about in fiction, the distinction here being that these were, of course, real, living people. As with her other novels, the focus is on the interpersonal relationships: between Henry and his sons, Henry and Eleanor, Eleanor and her sons, and between Hal, Richard, and Geoffrey themselves. The novel opens in 1172, fifteen months after Thomas Becket was murdered and just after Henry returns from a trip to Ireland to pay penance for his unwitting part in it. In this book, Sharon Kay Penman continues her tradition of writing historical fiction that both tells a good story and educates the reader. The details of the rift between Henry, Eleanor, and their sons are well-known, but the way in which Sharon Kay Penman presents it here is unique. Devil’s Brood tackles Henry and Eleanor’s children, from Prince Hal down to John Lackland. ![]() Devil’s Brood is the third book in a trilogy that began with When Christ and His Saints Slept and continued with Time and Chance. ![]()
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