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The Constant Princess
The Constant Princess

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Author: Philippa Gregory
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy Used: £0.73
You Save: £7.26 (91%)



New (25) Collectible (2) from £1.23

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 70 reviews
Sales Rank: 411

Media: Paperback
Pages: 528
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1.3

ISBN: 000719031X
EAN: 9780007190317
ASIN: 000719031X

Publication Date: May 2, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 70
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2 out of 5 stars repetitious..................   July 1, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

like other reviewers i have read most of Philippa Gregory's previous novels and was hoping that this one would be as absorbing as "The Queen's fool" and "The Boleyn inheritance". But I have to agree with the majority verdict that it is boring and repetitious - her constancy and her Spanish ancestry was harped upon throughout the novel.
But I did find Katherine believable so it was really annoying that she finished the book where she did ( I'm not saying where as I don't want to spoil it for others) and then tacked a small piece on the end. The book would have been much better had there been less of Catalina/Katherine's childhood and then she could have covered all of her life. Not one of her best



3 out of 5 stars could have been better   June 15, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

I have one constant complaint about Philippa Gregory, she does not appear to like Henry VIII at all. It comes over in The Other Boleyn Girl but even more so in The Boleyn Inheritance, and very much so in this book.

Whilst it is a 'what if' book, I found it deviated too much from what is known to hold true and the ending was over dramatic and sensationalised. Not one of the better books, although the author says it is her favourite. Not as readable as the other books, either. Good in that it has promoted Katherine of Aragon, but not good in that, like the other books I mentioned, Henry manages to be second best, sidelined, when he is of course central to the whole story.



4 out of 5 stars Excellent, thought provoking, read it!   May 14, 2008
Philippa Gregory manages to take the story that we all know and add her 'what if' scenario. PG explores the possibility that Katherine of Aragon was not a virgin at the time of marrying Henry and that her faith (which according to history made her a devout Catholic) was in fact not as strong and her real loyalty lay with her first love and husband - Arthur.

Very thought provoking and an extremely good read.



4 out of 5 stars Another success   April 11, 2008
I love two things about Philippa Gregory. One: she's confident enough to let the story tell itself, from the beginning. Most other writers would've felt pressured to jump right in with the Katherine v Anne battle, but she virtually ignores that, and this entire novel takes place more or less before the 'King's Great Matter.'

Two: I love the way she turns our preconceptions on their heads. Without giving the game away, she does it in The Other Boleyn Girl, when the she portrays the most outrageous lie told against Anne as being true (and who knows, maybe it was...) and she does it again here, right from the off. History has tended to come down on the side of approving Katherine's vow that her marriage to Arthur was not consummated. Once again, PG challenges this with a 'what if...' That said, this novel is decidedly Pro-Katherine. And rightly so. Hers is a story that should be told more often.



4 out of 5 stars Slow-paced and sweet, for those on "Team Aragon"!   March 9, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Having read The Other Boleyn Girl and The Boleyn Inheritance, I thought I'd go back to the beginning of the story and read more about Katherine of Aragon; she was characterised as such a class act in The Other Boleyn Girl novel (unlike in the film - but that's another story!). So The Constant Princess is the story of what made little Catalina, daughter of a warrior queen, into the steely-strong queen of the later days.

My favourite part of the novel was when Catalina and Arthur fall in love. Their awkward, unhappy adolescent relationship and its transformation into a tender and complete love, with all the passion and idealism of youth, was told very well. Philippa Gregory has a great talent for breathing fresh life into figures from history, and this relationship really came alive for me. After Arthur's death, I slightly lost interest in the novel; perhaps not all Philippa Gregory's fault, as she probably did what she could with seven lost, boring years of Catalina's isolation. The only thing sustaining the plot was Catalina's determination to keep her promise to her boy-husband and rule England for him as they had planned to do together. She has to use all her wits to steer around the obstacles to her planned marriage to the much younger "Harry", of whom she grows fond, despite knowing well his faults. Once she's got the ring on her finger, it does get a little bitty; battling the Scots one minute, and Anne Boleyn the next as it draws to a close.

The main draw of this book is a view from Katherine's mind, because in The Other Boleyn Girl she was only seen through the eyes of other characters. However, I do agree that it could have been more tightly edited towards the end, where her flashbacks and inner monologues become a bit repetitive. I enjoyed them more when she looked back on her childhood (her stories to Arthur about Spanish life and the Moors were interesting); less when they seemed to become a concentrated twice-daily dose of grit and determination. Also quite irritating was the overuse of "flatly" and "shortly" - just about everything that comes out of anyone's mouth is said "flatly" or "shortly", to the point where you could build a drinking game around it. Rather than lie in bed downing shots of vodka at every paragraph, I actually began listing synonyms to myself just to prove that there were other words in the English language that could be used instead.

Overall, I'd recommend it to those who loved The Other Boleyn Girl but fancy something a bit simpler and slower-paced.


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