Categories
Books

My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton & Jodi Meadows

My Lady Jane

My Lady Jane! A better title would have been Teens Messing with Henry VIII’s Succession Plans. Lady Jane Grey is a rather tragic figure in English history: ruled England for only 9 days before she was beheaded by her cousin Mary Tudor in the Tower of London. (And then Mary was overthrown by her half-sister Queen Elizabeth.)

The authors decided to give this an alternative history spin, with magic and humor. This is how the succession feud should have gone on. The split between the Roman Catholic Church and Church of England became the split between EΓ°ians (people with shapeshifter abilities) and the non-EΓ°ians.

β€œBloody” Mary is, of course, the villain of the piece. She has a zero-tolerance policy towards the EΓ°ians and will stop at nothing to get the throne. Everyone else in the family is an EΓ°ian too, and firmly on the opposing side. More importantly, they all live. In particular, Lady Jane Grey gets to keep her head (and her horse-shifter husband).

The authors have managed the alternative history parallels quite well. But this period of history (~Year 1553) had so much going on, that I suppose it’s impossible to close all plot threads. So, while the first half was breezy, the second half tried too hard to wrap up everything in a neat bow.

What’s the humor quotient like? I wouldn’t say it’s a β€œhilarious” book. But the book has its amusing moments, mostly of the macabre pun variety and jokes about the shapeshifting. For example:

He could practically hear the ballads the minstrels would sing about him, the great king who had died too soon.
Poor King Edward, now under the ground.
Hacked his lungs out. They’ve yet to be found.

He smoothed his hand over his hair before he caught her smile. β€œNo horse jokes.”
β€œNever! But I wanted to ask: are you catching a chill? You sound hoarse.”

Overall, if you’re looking for something meatier, this isn’t the book. But if you’re a diehard fan of Tudor history, then this is a book to add to your TBR. Again, you may need to adjust your reading lens a bit: light, amusing, make-believe YA.

Rating: 6.5 of 10

Have you read My Lady Jane? Or is there any another book on Jane Grey that you would recommend?

17 replies on “My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton & Jodi Meadows”

Ok so the shapeshifting elements sound interesting! I always have a hard time with alternate histories when they incorporate magic or whatever- sometimes I like ’em, sometimes I don’t, πŸ™‚

I am a huge Tudor history fan so this does intrigue me, even if I am not sure I would like it. I will think about it.

My favorite Lady Jane Grey book is called Another Spring by Katherine Wigmore Eyre. I think my mother must have bought it for my aunt years ago and I snagged it as a teen. Some of Eyre’s other books are worth hunting down as well.

Well, the authors do give a chapter at the start to explain the real history and how they are changing it all. So even if you’re a newbie to Tudor history, that allows for a good starting point.

I do like books set in this period but I don’t think this one is for me – I read a lot less YA these days and this one doesn’t really grab my attention.
Lynn πŸ˜€

Who doesn’t love Tudor history! Actually, it is amazing just how many re-tellings there are right? I think this would be kind of a fun read. I hadn’t heard of it so really enjoyed your review!

Comments are closed.