Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
relationships with the Lord Admiral, Robin Dudley, and the Earl
of Essex?
11. Though her behaviour and emotions are erratic, Elizabeth is steadfast
and confident in each choice that she makes. Regardless, several
members of her court follow her into perilous situations simply
because they believe she is lucky. Do you think that luck is the
reason Elizabeth was such a successful monarch? If not, do you think
she may have cultivated that impression intentionally?
12. Elizabeth had an affinity for playing chess, and the game is used
throughout the novel to describe her relationship with Robin, her
plans for Mary Queen of Scots, and her manipulation of men. How
does this symbolism affect how you perceive Queen Elizabeth? Was
she cold and calculating, thinking of people’s lives as a game, or
did she have to keep herself isolated, always forced to strategize and
guard herself against manipulation?
13. Queen Mary of Scotland is a great danger to Queen Elizabeth and
the English kingdom, yet Elizabeth refuses to kill her rival once she
is captured. Do you agree with Cecil who guessed that Elizabeth
could not bring herself to sentence someone to the same fate that
claimed her mother, her stepmother, and her first lover? Or is there a
different reason that she does not sign the death warrant?
14. Robin Dudley believes that “perhaps in every thousand years the
world produced one man or woman to live in incandescence,
enshrined within their span of time. What else would men call this
era but
Elizabethan
?” (535). Do you think there are any personas in
modern day that are comparable to Queen Elizabeth in their power
and influence—is there anyone important enough to name an entire
era after? If so, who? If not, do you believe that that is a benefit or a
detriment to society?
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About the Author
S
usan kay’s first novel,
Legacy
, won both the georgette
Heyer Historical Novel Prize and the Betty Trask Award. This
novel was followed by
Phantom
, which won the Parker Romantic Novel
of the Year Award in 1991. Kay worked as a primary school teacher
until leaving to bring up a family, and she now lives with her husband
in Cheshire.