I couldn’t help but feel sorry for her, despite her occasional venomous deed or devious plan.She also comes across as slightly barmy, which again evoked my sympathy, not mockery. In the bio she struck me as a nasty piece of work, whereas in this fiction-based-on-fact tale, she comes across as a more sympathetic character.The author shows Catherine as an unloved person who’s treated badly or neglected by those who should care for her right from childhood. I had previously read an account of her after this period in a non-fiction work, namely a biography on Henry IV of France. I expected to dislike her character throughout this book, but despite a few “evil intentions”, I found myself on her side and making excuses for her whenever she went too far with anything.This novel covers her time from the age of six through to thirty-nine. All I knew of Catherine de Medici before reading this fictionalised account of her life was that she was a “bad” woman.
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