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34 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I'd give it 10 stars if I could!!
AWESOME! An absolutely brilliant portrayal of Elizabeth I. The only thing I've ever seen come close to capturing Elizabeth so clearly and brilliantly is the old Masterpiece Theatre series on PBS done back in 70's or 80's with Glenda Jackson. All the charaterizations in the book are incredibly well drawn and detailed, particulary Elizabeth, Dudley and Cecil...
Published on October 23, 2006 by Misfit

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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A reluctant three stars
There's nothing awfully wrong with this historical novel. In fact, the author develops certain characters surrounding Elizabeth, such as Thomas Seymour; William Cecil and Robert, Earl of Leicester, exactly right. I just wish I could feel more enthusiasm for the book as a whole.

I have to confess to some confusion about the author's perspective on...
Published on January 11, 2010 by SusieQ


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34 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I'd give it 10 stars if I could!!, October 23, 2006
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This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
AWESOME! An absolutely brilliant portrayal of Elizabeth I. The only thing I've ever seen come close to capturing Elizabeth so clearly and brilliantly is the old Masterpiece Theatre series on PBS done back in 70's or 80's with Glenda Jackson. All the charaterizations in the book are incredibly well drawn and detailed, particulary Elizabeth, Dudley and Cecil.

The author also has a wonderful way of describing the times, the scenes, the clothes, etc. The author's opinions on Elizabeth's virginity (or lack thereof) and as to who killed Amy Dudley are very intriguing. Anyone interested in reading about this very complex and powerful Queen should put this on their reading list. With the resurgence in popularity of historical fiction and all things English, I can't imagine how this incredible book can be out of print. As another reviewer wrote, go and and it now.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Comparable to Margret George's work on Henry VIII, the best novel on Elizabeth I I have ever read, July 18, 2006
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This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
This is without a doubt the premier novel about Queen Elizabeth the first I have ever read and it is a shame that it is out of print. No author I believe, has come close to Ms. Kay at presenting Elizabeth and those who were around her as true people with all of the jealousy's, faults and joys that really were in their lives. And she does in a style of writing I love the most. Epic, large scale and all encompassing (and quite a bit with Dudley and romance included, which always makes me happy.)

Elizabeth is hard to write fiction about I think, but that doesn't stop people from trying. As a subject for a bio epic she's perfect-the woman was both the luckiest and unluckiest woman in the world in her lifetime and brought all other powers in Europe to their knees. Not to mention the many rumors in her life. What happened with Admiral Seymour? Did Robert Dudley murder his wife Amy so he could marry Elizabeth? Did she and Dudley ever consummate their love? And what was the deal with Essex?

Read it and find out. Five stars to a great novel. The best, most realistic (as apposed to romanticized) version of her life I have ever read. In fact, one of the better books I have ever read.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Favorite Elizabeth I fiction, April 13, 2006
By 
wkbee (NY, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
Absolutely my favorite fictional recounting of Elizabeth's story. I especially appreciated the way the author didn't limit herself to Elizabeth's perspective, but also offered the perspectives of others in her life, including, to name just a few, her mother, Cecil, Dudley and Mary Queen of Scots. This created a much more well-developed character than I've seen elsewhere; a character whose actions good and bad are strongly influenced and explained by the vicissitudes of her childhood and young adulthood. So many historical novels romanticize their protagonists, creating a one-dimensional hero out of a real person. I've always thought that that creats a cognitive dissonance for the reader because there is no way to similarly gild the historical characters' less attractive deeds. This Elizabeth is a complex and realistic character who, while not sanitized, is still highly sympathetic.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quite simply, the BEST portrayal of Elizabeth ever written, July 7, 2010
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This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
I have spent around six years perusing endless amounts of Tudor historical fiction. Along my way I have encountered many portrayals of Elizabeth I; some passable, some horrendous, and some very good. But until I read Legacy, I never found my ideal portrayal. Now I have, and it feels wonderful.

I received this book a few months ago, and since then it has not left my bedside table. Although I finished it in a day and a half, I have since read it three more times, not counting the hours I spend flipping to a random page to experience it again. This book is exquisite. Although it tells the entire arc of Elizabeth's story from birth to death, it only weighs in at a few hundred pages. And yet nothing feels rushed or left out. There are countless POVs, which in the hands of a less gifted writer would cause confusion, but in Susan Kay's hands gives us original insights into all the characters of Elizabeth's world. And they're all here, from Thomas Seymour to Henry VIII to numerous foreign ambassadors to the Earl of Essex. Each bring their own unique perspectives on the remarkable woman who dominates their existence.

Apart from Elizabeth (who I'll get to in a moment) the best characterizations in the book are Elizabeth's lover, Robert Dudley, and her chief minister, William Cecil. Dudley is portrayed as authentically as I've ever seen him; greedy and self-serving perhaps, but also compellingly human, a man torn in different directions and above all, passionately in love with Elizabeth. Cecil is given just as thorough a treatment. Principled and pragmatic, a family man with a ruthless streak, Cecil loves Elizabeth as much as Dudley does, although in a different way. As the book says, "one desired her body, the other her spirit." The triangle of these three people forms the central conflict of the book, as both men are eventually destroyed by their devotion to her.

But it is the portrayal of Elizabeth that makes this book so wonderful. It's as if Susan Kay reached into my mind, pulled out every thought I've ever had about Elizabeth while researching her, and transformed it into a stunning characterization that every few pages made me catch my breath and say "yes!" Her Elizabeth is brilliant, vain, narcissistic, loving, selfish, brave, charming, manipulative, patriotic, and above all magnetically charismatic. She has the "x" factor that other writers of Elizabeth seem to miss; the reason why Elizabeth was such a beloved leader and how she was able to command such affection and fear. To quote the book, "Elizabeth Tudor was a labyrinth. She drew people, without conscious effort, into the maze of her own personality and abandoned them there, leaving them to find their own way out again--if they could. Most found they were unable to, many never even tried. And those few who succeeded were troubled by a vague sense of loss for the rest of their days." (p. 13).

I cannot recommend this book more, to everyone from a dedicated student of Tudor history to a complete beginner. Much like Elizabeth, this book is completely magnetic--once you pick it up, I dare you to put it down. It is a book about a fascinating period of history, yes, but first and foremost it is a character study of a truly remarkable woman.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Haunting and Poignant, July 28, 2002
This review is from: Legacy (Hardcover)
Before I read this book, I always felt the greatest of admiration for Elizabeth I, but I never really felt that I knew her or understood her. This novel changed all of that. I realize that it is a fictionalized "autobiography," yet it presents such a coherent yet complex psychological portrait of the "Virgin Queen" that the whole book rings true. It's also a haunting book. I can't get this Elizabeth out of my head! Images and words from the book keep coming back at the strangest times: I can see the young Elizabeth sitting in the tower mesmerizing the only male around-a mouse! I can understand her cruelty even more than her kindness now! If you are a devoted fan of Elizabeth I (as I am), you NEED to read this book! Buy it used (though I can't understand how anyone would want to sell it!), borrow it from a library, but get it! I envy you reading it for the first time.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Legacy, the quintessential novel about Elizabeth, March 25, 2002
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This review is from: Legacy (Hardcover)
It's been over seven years since I first read Legacy, and I am still struck by the artistry of it. I have been fascinated by Elizabeth since childhood, after all she was a powerful woman in a time when women were considered the property of their fathers and afterwards of their husbands. This book is still one of the perfect books to curl up next to a fire with hot cider and immerse yourself in. Kay is frankly one of the best authors I have been lucky enough to discover, rivalling any bestselling author. Her other novel, Phantom, also sucks you into the color and passion of the story, making both novels unforgettable.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Book I have Honestly Ever Read!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, May 26, 1998
This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
I read Legacy for the first time when I was 15. When I was 18 I stumbled upon it again and read it. When I got married I desperately search every state library for this book....No Joke!!! I truly beleive this to be the best book I have ever read in my life. My entire family has now read it and they all feel the same. I knew and cared NOTHING of Elizabeth I...after reading this book I actually considered becoming a historian. It is so entrancing, acton-packed and succulent. I promise you will be hypnotized by Susan Kay's style and accuracy in her writing...... ALSO!! weather or not you are a Phantom of the Opera fan, check out her "Phantom" too!!! Marvelous!!!!!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning portrait of the Queen, January 13, 2005
This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
As I was reading this fictionalized account of Elizabeth I, I was struck by the amount of detail given to her life which I've not found in other novels about her. Here you find the Queen in all her mesmerizing, contradicting, and sometimes cruel beauty - the woman who could snare any man in her web; the alleged virgin (though not here!) who would share her crown with no man; and the monarch who could mete out punishment, but not stomach execution.

Kay poses many answers to the questions which plagued Elizabeth - Who murdered Amy Robsart, Robert Dudley's wife? Was she really a virgin? What were her true feelings toward Mary Stuart who stood to inherit her crown if she died? The revelations are intriguing and ring as truth.

The book begins with Elizabeth's life as the proclaimed bastard of Anne Boleyn and continues through her captivity at the hands of her half-sister, Mary I up to her reign as the Queen of England. Her life here is shadowed by the spectre of her mother who died at the block which is also given as a reason that she could not bear the thought of having given the order for anyone's execution. The writing is emotional and will send you into the world of Tudor and Elizebethan England.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow-Utterly Definitive-GO AND BUY THIS BOOK RIGHT NOW, April 3, 2001
This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
...from the start I was utterly captivated by it. The sheer brilliance and historical accuracy as well as the genuine emotion from it were astounding. Susan Kay is one of the most brilliant authors I have read in a long while. Anyone who loves historical novels will adore this book. In particular if you love Tudor history or Queen Elizabeth I and her forebears you will think it is fantastic. In partivular the scene at the end-It had me in tears. GO AND BUY THIS NOVEL RIGHT NOW-IT IS WORTH EVERY PENNY
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The definitive novel on the life and character of Elizabeth, February 4, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Legacy (Paperback)
After reading Susan Kay's Phantom, which is the most beautiful and moving novel about my favorite character in all of literature, I decided that I loved her eloquent and interesting writing style and the emotion and insight she put into the novel. Therefore, I knew had to find her other novel, Legacy. After many patience weeks of searching and annoying librarians, I had it and in this book I discovered the most human characterization of one of the world's most compelling and intriquing historical figures. Susan Kay captured the life and spirit in Elizabeth Tudor and expressed it as beautifully as she did that of Erik. The lives of Elizabeth, Robin, Cecil, and all the others become real again. Her book inspired me to learn more about these people and this time period, and I have yet to find a more real, compelling, and moving novel about Elizabeth.
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