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Among the many surprises is Fields's suggestion that Richard did not commit what is widely understood to be his most atrocious crime: the murder of his nephews, the Woodville Princes. With a lawyer's zeal for establishing doubt, Fields boldly entertains several possibilities for the princes' fates, arguing that other powerful contestants for the English throne, like Richard's Tudor successor Henry VII, could have been responsible for the deaths of the boys--or that the infamous killing might not have even taken place. Fields also speculates on what might have happened had Richard not become king. Would England have remained Catholic? Could the First World War have been prevented? Such conjectures may raise an eyebrow--they are as delightfully provocative as the rest of Royal Blood. --James Highfill
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Just the facts.,
By
This review is from: Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes (Hardcover)
I remember reading Alison Weir's "The Princes in the Tower" in 1998, in five or six consecutive sittings at a Border's store, and how, in spite of the inherently interesting nature of the work, the author had, in my opinion, shot herself on the foot between pages 1 and 13, citing the sources and their credibility. Each source she considered credible, I saw as totally suspicious, and couldn't believe that a historian would mention their obvious bias and unreliability and, still, insist that they were honest, perfectly good sources of information (Rous, More, and others). Then I found Fields' work on the subject, and this author cast suspicion on the reliability of those same sources for the same reasons that they looked crooked to me, so I enjoyed his book a lot more than Weir's because it is more logical and, in view of the other biographies of Richard III that I've bought and read since then (Anthony Cheetham's, Paul Murray Kendall's, Charles Ross's), is far more worried with the real, reliable information, than with deciding on guilt with less than stellar witnesses, chroniclers, or Shakespeare fans. True, the last chapter is perhaps unnecessary, but it serves as a refreshing display of speculation next to a book that has been nothing but factual evidence, leaving the speculative domain to authors such as Weir, who has made a carrer out of glorifying the Tudors.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Poor Alison Weir,
By
This review is from: Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes (Hardcover)
Mr. Fields seems not so much a revisionist Richardian, as a foe of noted biographer Alison Weir. He really picks on her recent book in which she "proves" that Richard III was the evil uncle. Fields's legal background does bring an interesting approach to the fate of Richard's nephews, but he is a bit sloppy, contradicting himself and really not sticking to his analytical guns. To be honest, I will read just about anything about Richard III: he is a fascinating character, for good or bad, crooked or even shouldered. Still and all, nothing beats out Josephine Tey's "Daughter of Time" for sheer pleasure. I don't care if she wrote bad history. It was that novel that awakened me to the great joys of historical research and the need to look at all sides of an issue. I am not convinced by Fields or Weir, but I am willing to consider anything a dedicated, even obsessive, historian writes about Richard III, just for the fun of comparing and contrasting these heart-felt views. May the debate rage on!
14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An interesting treatment of the mystery of the princes,
By
This review is from: Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes (Paperback)
Written by an entertainment lawyer, this book provides a new look at an old mystery. Ever since I read The Daughter of Time, I've been interested in the questions surrounding the murder of the princes in the Tower, so when I saw this book in the National Portait Gallery in London, I just had to buy it. While few of the facts mentioned in the book are new, the way Fields treats the case is certainly novel. Although using our current standards of evidence to judge a 500 year old crime may strike some as excessive, Fields' approach does lay out a clear and concise case which could serve as a solid intro to the issues for a newcomer to this debate. The chapter of "what might have beens" was the most entertaining part of the book and reminded me that history is a living thing, subject to the whims of individuals. While we may never know the truth of who killed the princes, the amount of interest that this case generates even today highlights that most human of characteristics- the burning desire to know just for the sake of knowing.
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