From amazon.com, on Ford Madox Ford's Fifth Queen: Now back in print, Ford's highly acclaimed portrait of Henry VIII's controversial fifth Queen This masterful performance of historical fiction centers on Katharine Howard--clever, beautiful, and outspoken--who catches the jaded eye of Henry VIII and becomes his fifth Queen. Corruption and fear pervade the King's court, and the dimly lit corridors vibrate with the intrigues of unscrupulous courtiers hungry for power. Soon Katharine is locked in a vicious battle with Thomas Cromwell, the Lord Privy Seal, as she fights for political and religious change. Ford saw the past as an integral part of the present experience and understanding, and his sharply etched vision of the court of Henry VIII--first published in 1908--echoes aspects of Edwardian England as it explores the pervading influence of power, lies, fear, and anxiety on people's lives. Stephen Adams Carrol Cox wrote: >Miss Tudor moved them with galleons (from memory - in Thrones I think) > >So she is one of the heroines of the Cantos. > >She was the daughter of Anne Boleyn. > >Whether this is relevant or not I do not know. > >Those quatrains have always been for me among the greater puzzles of the >Pisan Cantos. > >Carrol > > -- Stephen Adams Department of English University of Western Ontario "Of making many books there is no end." –Ecclesiastes 12:12