By Alexa Schnee
Guideposts, April 2012
About the Book
For centuries,
readers have debated the identity of the mysterious Dark Lady in William
Shakespeare’s sonnets. Emilia Bassano—lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth and
one of the first women poets in England—could be the answer.
Emilia Bassano
is one of the most dazzling ladies at court when she meets the little-known
playwright William Shakespeare, and despite everything, they fall in love. But
the course of true love never did run smooth, and the Virgin Queen does not
take lightly to her ladies straying. These star-crossed lovers must fight for
their love—and, eventually, their lives.
From the
plague-ridden streets of London to the throne room of Greenwich Court to the
stage of the Globe Theater, Shakespeare’s
Lady explores grace, forgiveness, and forbidden love between the greatest
poet the world has ever known and the woman who inspired him.
My Review
Loved, loved,
loved this book on so many levels. I kept thinking about how deep and emotional—not
to mention edgy—this book was for an inspirational book. The author’s voice was
superb and very distinct. I appreciated how the novel was written in the first
person point of view because it gave me a deeper connection to the heroine. I
was in awe of how the author kept my mind engaged in that time period and how
she had me worried about many of the characters. You could sense how trapped
the heroine felt and how obligated she was to serve the queen and be the best
she could, but how that also meant she had to do whatever the queen desired of
her no matter how painful or offensive that might be. I cannot imagine having
to be a mistress to an old man. I pitied her situation.
I think what I
loved best about this story, though, was how true to the era and the times that
the author was in regards to her storytelling. She didn’t try to sanitize the
emotion and the conflict to make it a gentler book. Her characterization was
powerful because it felt realistic, and Emelia’s thoughts and actions seemed
genuine. The heroine was so conflicted about her life and what she was doing,
yet she yearned for more, then lost it all in the end anyway. This was a
powerful tale of love longed for, found, then lost. I truly understood the
character’s conflict because her character was so well written that you could feel
her humanity and her pain.
I also found a
lot of the wording quite poetic and lyrical in style. In fact, I found myself
reading a number of phrases out loud to a friend because they evoked such imagery
and emotion. The descriptions and foreshadowing were well done, too. I am a
huge fan of the Elizabethan period in English history and because of that, this
book was a real treat for me. I appreciated the author’s artistic license in
giving a name and a face to the character who may have inspired Shakespeare’s
emotionally evocative and dark sonnets. The author posted a number of them at
the end of the book and I could see after reading the sonnets how the author
might conclude that Emelia Bassano could have been his inspiration.
I never read a
book twice, but this is one book that would inspire me to do so. It was
beautifully written and a solid story. Because of the first person point of
view, I was in the head of Emelia for the entire story and I lived in her
shoes. What was so incredible to me was how well the author described so many
things that a married woman might experience despite the author’s young age. I
can’t remember a time when I enjoyed a historical novel written in first person
point of view more. I wish more Christian publishers would publish this type of
realistic fiction. I highly recommend Shakespeare’s
Lady, and because it was so well-written it’s making my favorites list for
2012.
Michelle Sutton
Healing Hearts . . . fiction making an impact on real lives
. . .
New titles releasing in
2012: Decision to Love, It’s Not About Her, Somebody
Love Me,
Out of Time,
and Surprise Love

2 comments:
Thank you so much for posting this review. It makes me want to run out and get this book. It sounds great. I will be adding it to my wish list.
I was wondering whether you would be happy to put up a link in my monthly series called “Books You Love”. The idea is for people to link up posts about a book they loved – it doesn’t have to be one they just posted about. It could be an old fave. I am hoping we will end up with a nice collection of books that can go on our reading lists. Here is the link Books You Loved June Edition
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