Mary Boleyn Audiobook By Alison Weir cover art

Mary Boleyn

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Mary Boleyn

By: Alison Weir
Narrated by: Maggie Mash
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About this listen

Mary Boleyn was the mistress of two kings, Francois I of France and Henry VIII of England, and sister to Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII’s second wife. In this astonishing and riveting biography, Alison Weir’s extensive research gives a new and detailed portrayal, in which she recounts that, contrary to popular belief, Mary was entirely undeserving of her posthumous notoriety as a great whore.

©2011 Alison Weir (P)2011 W F Howes Ltd
Europe Great Britain Historical Renaissance
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Detailed Research • New Insights • Pleasant Narration • Evidence-based Analysis • Enjoyable Performance
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Though Alison Weir is always a little extreme in her views, I enjoyed the book thoroughly. It is easy to delineate between fact and the author's opinions. It was good to learn about Mary, as she has become a popular figure without really being better understood. The narrator was fine, though halfway through her voice changes so much that for a couple of minutes I thought they had replaced her.

Enjoyable look at the Boleyn family

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I must admit that although I am a fan of Alison Weir and have enjoyed everything that has flowed from her pen, this book in my humble opinion was not her best. It is heavy with speculation that is definitely 'out of the box'. It delves into the period 1522 until around 1536. There is a lot of background information regarding Henry's ever evolving personality plus we read much about the Boleyn family dynamic. Alison Weir discusses the possibility that Anne may well have been the elder daughter which based on my studies was quite an eyebrow raiser!

Normally I cannot put down one of Alison Weir's books as to date I have found that they are real page turners. I may well give this a second listen in the future as it was interesting but not engrossing.

Academic Study Filled With Intelligent Speculation

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lots of detail on Mary's life and info on all her family, including her children

great info

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About 14 chapters of what could have been two. I admire the research; however, something's just need more information.

Little facts and many maybes

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I am a huge fan of Alison Weir. Having said that, this book is a real disappointment to me. There are simply too many "maybe's." For instance, "Maybe Mary never saw Anne again." There is simply too much supposition in this book for me to take it seriously as an historical work. While Mary Boleyn was in many ways a minor character in the Tudor saga, she still had a life unto herself which, if one is endeavoring to chronicle, deserves more fact and less supposition.

Disappointed.

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It’s apparent that this book has been thoroughly researched. But all the silly voices that the narrator uses to indicate quotes from various sources is not only poorly done, but absolutely annoying. Plus with an audible book you don’t know where the references are coming from. If I “read” this again, it will be a real book. I certainly don’t recommend the Audible edition.

Better to be read than listen to

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It takes a historian to do the necessary research to find facts about a little-known historical character, about whom much has been said but little actually known. When you do the work (and here Weir has done it for us), the truth is always much more interesting than contemporaneous accounts. Mary escaped the agony of Anne's life and lived long enough to bring up her children and grandchildren and influence the future Queen Elizabeth I. Very interesting book for Tudor addicts like myself.

Real History of a Complex and Hidden Character

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If you could sum up Mary Boleyn in three words, what would they be?

Phenomenal, riveting, and accurate

Any additional comments?

I adore Alison Weir's biographies. She does painstaking first hand research from primary sources and is unfailingly accurate in her representations of historical figures. This biography exposes a lot of fallacies passed along as fact for generations by less committed biographers. Weir tackles the problems of incomplete, damaged, and decayed records with aplomb and should be commended for refusing to pass along the information far easier to find in secondary and tertiary sources and instead doing her own research to obtain new and more accurate conclusions. Weir is a phenomenal biographer and a talented writer. The narrator, Maggie Mash, does a lovely job of making the figures come alive and I will be looking at more of her books in the future. I sincerely enjoyed this book and look forward to more of Alison Weir's fiction and nonfiction.

This is a BIOGRAPHY, not a novel.

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The thing I liked the most about this book is that it didn’t just repeat stories with little to no fact basis. I didn’t even realize how little is known about her life. I very much enjoyed this one.

Interesting

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You learn a lot. I had no idea Dudley's wife was kin to Elizabeth. I don't understand why movies mess everything up when the real life stories are often dramatic enough!

Informative

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