Editorial Content for The Cardinal: A Novel of Love and Power
Contributors
Reviewer (text)
For anyone who has followed the prolific and renowned career of British historian-novelist Alison Weir, the appearance of her latest fact-based novel, THE CARDINAL, must seem almost inevitable. Having written critically acclaimed portraits of all six of Henry VIII’s wives, as well as about the mercurial monarch himself, no one would know better than Weir how many rich stories from the Tudor court still await fresh revelation.
Weir's latest historical celebrity is none other than Cardinal Thomas Wolsey (1471–1530), whose unlikely origins as a village butcher’s son make his dogged rise to power (second only to that of the king himself) a tale of excitement, intrigue, controversy and notoriety. No less dramatic was Wolsey’s abrupt final fall from favor, made even more impactful by a series of suspenseful flare-ups and reconciliations with the king.
"THE CARDINAL is a must-read for anyone who is passionate about history and its complicated, unique characters."
Adding to the emotional depth Weir achieves throughout THE CARDINAL is Wolsey’s persistent desire to fill a fatherly or brotherly role in his relationship to the younger Henry, who is barely out of childhood when they meet. From the beginning, they privately remain Tom and Harry to one another as Wolsey tries, with limited success, to guide the pleasure-loving young monarch into taking his royal responsibilities more seriously.
Ironically, Wolsey has even less parental success with a son he conceives by his mistress, Joan Larke; Thomas Junior becomes little more than an idle hanger-on in his father’s household and fades from view. Weir gently massages what little is known of Wolsey and Larke’s clandestine relationship by suggesting that they actually had several children together, even after her arranged marriage to another man.
It was Wolsey, both publicly and behind the scenes, who filled in the many administrative gaps that Henry impatiently left unattended in favor of a sporting and partying lifestyle --- a role formalized in 1515 when he appointed Wolsey Lord Chancellor of England. By then, he had accumulated numerous prestigious posts within church and court and, as Weir suggests, just as many aristocratic enemies who were resentful of his commoner origins and consistent ability to influence Henry’s domestic and foreign policy.
But the single issue that inevitably would lead to Wolsey’s irremediable downfall was his failure to persuade the Pope to annul Henry’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon because she had failed to supply a male heir. Dubbed “The Great Matter,” discussions and negotiations went on for years between England and the Vatican, continually interrupting Wolsey’s otherwise successful career with periods of stress, uncertainty and well-founded fears of reprisal.
It wasn’t until after Wolsey’s lonely death in 1530, while en route to face trumped-up charges of sedition and other state crimes, that his erstwhile protégé, Thomas Cromwell, came to the fore, supporting the king in his secession from Rome and becoming the head of his own English church.
To put it plainly, Thomas Wolsey was anything but a likable character. His loyalty to his priestly vows was blurred by allegiance to Henry VIII and his own love of sumptuous homes filled with the finest furnishings, apparel and food that money could buy. His logical and pragmatic intelligence often won out over spirituality, principles and ethics, as he struggled to survive amid the cut-and-thrust politics of the court.
Weir’s nuanced glimpses into the emotional and intimate facets of Wolsey’s life help to explain (without over-psychologizing) how a bright young village boy with the good fortune to attain a scholarship to Oxford became a relentless and often sycophantic power-seeker.
And that makes THE CARDINAL a pointed and timely lesson for some of today’s political power-mongers whose values and consciences have been entirely dissolved by their fanatical allegiance to a handful of dangerously unstable world leaders bent on absolute kingship, whether they’ve earned it or not.
Once again, Alison Weir has crafted a powerful and fast-paced narrative on a very human scale, where fiction never compromises the substance of historical context. THE CARDINAL is a must-read for anyone who is passionate about history and its complicated, unique characters.
Teaser
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey’s rise from humble beginnings coincided with young Henry VIII’s ascension to the throne in 1509, and they grew to be cherished friends. By 1515, Wolsey --- now a cardinal --- had become the controlling figure in all matters of church and state. Wolsey operated on an international stage and worked hard to broker universal peace. All was going dazzlingly well until Henry fell in love with Anne Boleyn and sought to end his marriage to his first wife, Katherine of Aragon. Swept up in the maelstrom of “the Divorce,” Wolsey, who successfully had given his master everything he wanted, found himself in an impossible situation. As he drew the ire of the future queen, the cardinal found his privileged life and his relationship with Henry crumbling around him.
Promo
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey’s rise from humble beginnings coincided with young Henry VIII’s ascension to the throne in 1509, and they grew to be cherished friends. By 1515, Wolsey --- now a cardinal --- had become the controlling figure in all matters of church and state. Wolsey operated on an international stage and worked hard to broker universal peace. All was going dazzlingly well until Henry fell in love with Anne Boleyn and sought to end his marriage to his first wife, Katherine of Aragon. Swept up in the maelstrom of “the Divorce,” Wolsey, who successfully had given his master everything he wanted, found himself in an impossible situation. As he drew the ire of the future queen, the cardinal found his privileged life and his relationship with Henry crumbling around him.
About the Book
In this “immersive tale of Tudor intrigue” (Publishers Weekly), the New York Times bestselling author of THE LAST WHITE ROSE explores the rise of Thomas Wolsey, who was Henry VIII’s chief adviser --- until the king accused him of treason.
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey enjoyed one of the most meteoric careers in history. His rise from humble beginnings coincided with young Henry VIII’s ascension to the throne in 1509. The two grew to be cherished friends. And by 1515, Wolsey, now a cardinal, had become the controlling figure in all matters of church and state.
Wolsey operated on an international stage and worked hard to broker universal peace. All was going dazzlingly well until Henry fell in love with Anne Boleyn --- the woman whom Wolsey would one day call “the night crow” --- and sought to end his marriage to his first wife, Katherine of Aragon. Swept up in the maelstrom of “the Divorce,” Wolsey, who successfully had given his master everything he wanted, found himself in an impossible situation. As he drew the ire of the future queen, the cardinal found his privileged life and his relationship with Henry crumbling around him.
Alison Weir’s poignant novel tells the story of Wolsey the man --- his incredible rise to power and his tragic fall. She delves beyond the splendor and political machinations of the Tudor court to reveal the secrets of Wolsey’s private life, the mistress and children he was devoted to, and the tragedy that overtook them. It is a tale of two women, one who loved him and one who hated him --- and also a tale of two men, king and commoner, the special, deep-rooted bonds that brought them together and the forces that drove them apart.
Audiobook available, read by Rosalyn Landor