Note that Bring Up The Bodies is the sequel to Wolf Hall, so
if you would like to see what I thought about that book, you can see my review here. It carries on with the story of Thomas Cromwell but as I said in my first
review, it is far from a run-of-the-mill historical fiction set in the reign of
Henry VIII. I’m going to keep this review pretty short, as I don’t want there
to be too much repetition between my review of this and Wolf Hall! Here is what
I thought about it:
In a nutshell: I loved Wolf Hall a lot, but in my
opinion this was even better.
Would you recommend this book? Absolutely. If you
read Wolf Hall and enjoyed it, this is pretty much a no-brainer as it has
everything that was great about the first book and more. I actually think it
could be read as a stand-alone book, but I think reading Wolf Hall gives you a
greater understanding of Thomas Cromwell, the main character, and explains his
actions in this in a greater detail.
How quickly did you read it? I actually found this
fairly easy to read so it didn’t take me very long, just over a week. The
hardback edition I have has 407 pages. Honestly though, I really didn’t want
this book to end and took ages reading the last few pages.
Why did you choose to read this book? Other than the
fact I really enjoyed Wolf Hall and this also ticks off another aspect of my
reading challenge, the BBC adaptation has started and I wanted to finish the
series before the TV show caught up with me.
Favourite aspect of the book? Where to start? Seeing
as I started this the day after finishing Wolf Hall, my expectations were
ridiculously high. But this actually surpassed my expectations.
The writing is brilliant – I think even more so than the first book. It is less confusing in its style which was my only gripe with Wolf Hall as Hilary Mantel, instead of using just ‘he’, starts to use the phrase ‘he, Cromwell’ or ‘he, Henry’ to give clarity! But honestly there were so many parts where the writing was so great I actually wrote down some of the sentences in my journal or texted them or read them aloud to friends and family who have already read it. I don’t want to ruin anything but after the final page I just stopped and took it all in, it was the perfect way to end it.
Once again the book felt well researched, the dialogue was witty and it continued to give a fresh take on the period with the well-known story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn as the backdrop.
The writing is brilliant – I think even more so than the first book. It is less confusing in its style which was my only gripe with Wolf Hall as Hilary Mantel, instead of using just ‘he’, starts to use the phrase ‘he, Cromwell’ or ‘he, Henry’ to give clarity! But honestly there were so many parts where the writing was so great I actually wrote down some of the sentences in my journal or texted them or read them aloud to friends and family who have already read it. I don’t want to ruin anything but after the final page I just stopped and took it all in, it was the perfect way to end it.
Once again the book felt well researched, the dialogue was witty and it continued to give a fresh take on the period with the well-known story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn as the backdrop.
Anything you didn’t like? I would genuinely give this
five stars, ten out of ten, whatever the top rating is!
Any additional thoughts? All I have left to say is
that I cannot wait for the third book in the trilogy, The Mirror and the Light
which (apparently) is coming out this year.
Deserving of the Man Booker Prize? Yes!
I will leave you with one of the parts that I stopped to read to someone:
I will leave you with one of the parts that I stopped to read to someone:
"The things you think are the disasters in your life are not the disasters really. Almost anything can be turned around: out of every ditch, a path, if you can only see it."
Beth x