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Suzannah Dunn

    Suzannah Dunn crafts compelling historical narratives, primarily focusing on the lives of Tudor women, imbuing them with psychological depth and meticulous detail. Her writing style is rich and insightful, exploring the hidden motivations and societal constraints faced by these influential figures. Through evocative storytelling, she offers readers an intimate glimpse into their destinies and the eras they inhabited. Her works are distinguished by their immersive historical atmosphere and profound empathy for her characters.

    The Confession of Katherine Howard
    The May Bride
    The Queen of Subtleties
    Quite Contrary
    The sixth wife
    Tenterhooks
    • Tenterhooks

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      3.6(18)Add rating

      These stories offer observations of women's lives. From the tale of Auntie Fay's trip to Spain for the summer (tanning to the hue of a blood blister and routinely saving the skins of Renee and her unfortunate family), to the sixth form field trip (of stale cigarettes, smuggled scotch, and mutiny).

      Tenterhooks
    • 'The Sixth Wife' is a gripping novel of love, passion, betrayal and heartbreak. Catharine Parr survived Henry VIII to find true love with Thomas Seymour - only to realise that her love was based on a lie.

      The sixth wife
    • The award-winning debut novel from the author of Venus Flaring and Tenterhooks. Elizabeth, a young, overworked hospital doctor, gets a phone call from her father late on a Friday night telling her that her mother is dangerously ill. Over the course of the weekend that follows, Elizabeth, on duty as ever and confronting the barely controlled chaos of a busy casualty ward, finds moments to reminisce about her childhood, its joys and its miseries. Past and present are interwoven in a series of vivid tableaux, drawing the reader into an intimate understanding of Elizabeth's life as a whole.

      Quite Contrary
    • The Queen of Subtleties

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      3.4(1856)Add rating

      A tremendously vivid, page-turning and plausible novel that depicts the rise and fall of Anne Boleyn, the most spirited, independent and courageous of Henry's queens, as viewed from both the bedrooms and the kitchens of the Tudor court.

      The Queen of Subtleties
    • From the bestselling author of The Confession of Katherine Howard, the story of two years at the Seymour family home, Wolf Hall, that changed Jane Seymour's life for ever.'I loved this powerful book and can't recommend highly enough' Martina Cole

      The May Bride
    • The Queen's Sorrow

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      2.6(50)Add rating

      A queen brought low by love compromised and power abused -- the tragedy of Mary Tudor. Plain, dutiful and a passionate Catholic, Mary Tudor was overjoyed by joy when she became England's queen. After the misery of her childhood, when her father had rejected her mother, and effectively disowned his daughter, Mary felt at last that she was achieving her destiny. And when she marries Philip of Spain, her happiness is complete. But Mary's delight quickly turns sour as she realises that her husband does not love her. In fact he finds her devotion irritating. Desperate for a baby, she begins to believe that God is punishing her. Her people are horrified at the severity of the measures she takes and begin to turn against their queen who is lonely, frightened -- and desperate for love. Rafael, a member of Philip of Spain's entourage, is a reluctant witness to the unfolding tragedy and as the once-feted queen tightens her cruel hold on the nation, Rafael becomes closer to Mary and his life -- and new-found love -- are caught up in the terrible chaos that follows.

      The Queen's Sorrow
    • An unsettling novel about the secrets, lies and omissions of a small rural community by bestselling novelist Suzannah Dunn.

      Levitation for Beginners