cover image Queen Defiant

Queen Defiant

Anne O'Brien. NAL, $15 trade paper (448p) ISBN 978-0-451-23411-7

O'Brien's fairly straightforward latest (after The Virgin Widow) follows Eleanor of Aquitaine throughout her first marriage and the years leading up to her second marriage to Henry Plantagenet, wherein she swaps her French crown for the English crown. Eleanor was one of the wealthiest and most powerful women in medieval Europe, but an arrangement made when she was young seals her fate as the new wife of Louis Capet. The young duchess, who shortly after becomes queen of France, quickly discovers her assertiveness does not win her any friends, particularly among the abbots who advise her husband. The book documents her struggle with the church and its influence on her husband, and, later, her quest for an annulment as intrigues pile up and she gains the attentions of other prominent men. Eleanor is the picture of defiance, and her bold, fiery voice (not to mention impressive bio) is the strongest asset of this successful historical. (June)