Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. I am just completing a novel of the marvellous letter-writing Paston family, bedevilled by wills, legal challenges and sieges. There are some splendid women in the Paston story for me to spend time with. Anne O'Brien is the Sunday Times Bestselling author of titles such as The Queen's Rival, and here she gives an interview on her career.

  2. Combine Editions. Anne O'Brien’s books. Average rating: 3.89 · 20,954 ratings · 1,871 reviews · 71 distinct works • Similar authors. The King's Concubine. 3.97 avg rating — 3,159 ratings — published 2012 — 27 editions. Want to Read. saving…. Want to Read. Currently Reading.

  3. Anne O'Brien Books. 4,969 likes · 1,485 talking about this. Sunday Times Bestseller Writer of Historical Fiction celebrating Medieval Women. A Court of...

  4. 4 de may. de 2017 · May 7, 2017. Anne O’Brien’s new novel, The Shadow Queen, tells the story of Joan of Kent, wife of the Black Prince and mother of the future King Richard II of England. Although Joan wasn’t actually a queen, she was never far from the throne – as cousin to Edward III, she had Plantagenet blood, and through her husband, Edward’s eldest ...

  5. About Anne. Anne was born in the West Riding of Yorkshire. After gaining a B.A. Honours degree in History at Manchester University, a PGCE at Leeds University and a Masters degree in education at Hull University, she lived in the East Riding as a teacher of history. Always a prolific reader, she enjoyed historical fiction and was encouraged to ...

  6. Now available in paperback in the UK. from 22nd March 2018. Her reputation is one of beauty, scandal and rumour. Her royal blood makes her a desirable bride. Her ambition and passion make her a threat. She is mother to the child-king Richard II. She is the power behind the throne. She is Joan of Kent – the Shadow Queen.

  7. Titles. I write about medieval history, for which I have a passion. I write about the women, born into a world dominated by the policies of men, who are almost silent in the records of their time. Raised under the authority of father, husband, brother, they seem to have so little to say to us. But is this true?