Swedish by birth, but educated in Britain, France and Germany, Leonie Frieda speaks five languages and is a member of the Institute of Linguists. She is the author of a bestselling biography of Catherine de Medici, and THE DEADLY SISTERHOOD: A STORY OF WOMEN, POWER AND INTRIGUE IN THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE and FRANCIS I: THE MAKER OF MODERN FRANCE. She lives in London and has two children. http://www.leoniefrieda.com/
Leonie Frieda does this remarkable woman full justice. Refusing to
play judge, she reveals her to us through the best of means, which
is narrative. The skill with which Frieda finds her way through the
maze of this confusing period is exemplary. You read on eagerly. An
enthralling book
*Literary Review*
This masterful and compelling biography delivers a beautifully
written portrait of a ruthless, subtle and fearless woman fighting
for survival and power in a world of gangsterish brutality, routine
assassination and religious mania. I quickly found I could not stop
reading. This is narrative history at its best, both scholarly and
as captivating as a thriller. Leonie Frieda has brought a largely
forgotten heroine-villainess and a whole sumptuously vicious era
back to life again. She is equally at home in the royal court as
she is in the blood-reeking gutters of Paris: this is The Godfather
meets Elizabeth
*Mail on Sunday*
A stunning biography, which brings to life a heroic woman and the
tumultuous, cruel and gaudy times in which she lived
*Paul Johnson*
As Leonie Frieda shows in this absorbing biography, Catherine was a
well-intentioned woman who resorted to extreme measures only under
pressure. With its engaging style and deft handling of complex
events, this accomplished account of Catherine's career is an
engrossing tale, compellingly narrated
*The Spectator*
Gorgeous detail and remarkable anecdotes....There is no mistaking
the abiding pleasure of this smart and stylish book
*Washington Times*
As Leonie Frieda relates in this well-researched and immensely
readable first biography, from her turbulent home in Florence
Catherine found herself presiding over perhaps the nastiest period
in all French history. Frieda is much to be praised for painting a
wonderfully rich canvas
*The Times*
Leonie Frieda has produced an absorbing, entertaining study of a
time when the luxury and depravity of princes went hand-in-hand
with power-plotting, assassination and bloody vengeance
*Daily Mail*
Frieda's confidence in her mission permeates the book, raising what
is in any case a fascinating narrative to the level of cogent and
powerful argument . . . This intelligent and well-researched
biography is a worthy testament to Catherine's formidable strength.
Catherine de Medici reveals Frieda, a first-time biographer, to be
a writer of tremendous skill and talent
*Observer*
Leonie Frieda has handled the history of this complex period with
skill. Without skimping on the drama and debauchery of the court of
the Valois, she has defended, but not whitewashed, Catherine and
produced a fascinating picture of a remarkable woman
*Evening Standard*
Frieda's enjoyable and skilfully written biography ... conveys,
vividly at times, the outsize style of Renaissance rule: the Loire
châteaux, the feasts and balls and masques, the exotic costumes,
the elaborate needlework, the pioneering attempts at ballet and
opera, the bizarre collection of stuffed objects that ranged from
stuffed crocodiles to priceless manuscripts. Catherine's supreme
command of the political display is adroitly brought out
*Sunday Telegraph*
This is a masterly biography and a fascinating one
*Independent*
In Frieda's scholarly tome, Catherine de Medici is painted not in
the dark hues of her critics but using a more colourful palate.
Through a prodigious amount of research, that was assisted by the
author's versatility in five European languages, all the colour and
splendour of Catherine's court is recreated
*Scotsman*
In this splendid, detailed and gripping biography, Frieda does
Catherine ample justice
*BBC History Magazine*
Leonie Frieda has produced a formidable book. Meticulously
researched and extremely well-written, this surely will be the
definitive biography of Catherine de Medici for many years to
come
*Medieval History Magazine*
Leonie Frieda is clearly already a very professional writer, but
this is her first major work of history. It is a most excellent
book that should be read by everybody who believes that education
for its own sake has value, and that history in particular has
cautionary tales to offer. Leonie Frieda, happily for us, manifests
an Actonian sense of humour in her writing. The author paints a
brilliant picture of the French court and of her subject's private
life
*Catholic Herald*
A well-written and colourful journey through 16th century France,
entertaining to read as well as frequently illuminating
*Country Life*
Frieda succeeds in making her subject interesting and coherent, and
shows her operating in a political context that left no room for
squeamishness or scruple
*Sunday Times*
Frieda's richly detailed account . . . paints a most fascinating
picture of French court life. The political complexities are kept
mercifully clear, the main lines of rivalry sharp, the characters
vivid
*Daily Telegraph*
Dramatic and fascinating - a real page-turner. Thoroughly
recommended
*Military Illustrated*
A triumph . . . she succeeds where some historical biographers
fail: she takes an interesting story and makes it live with her
writing where the bland prose of others would kill our interest
stone dead
*Birmingham Post*
Sympathetic and gloriously detailed
*New Statesman*
Interesting and well-written . . . enlightens the reader about a
turbulent and fascinating period which still arouses debate and
disagreement
*The Tablet*
An assured and genuinely gripping tale of a woman - 'the Black
Queen' - who ruthlessly conspired in 16th-century France and
battled against more adversities in a day than most of us have had
in a lifetime
*ES Magazine*
A biography of scrupulous detail
*Irish Times*
A rich and insightful piece of biographical and historical writing,
which not only brings to life the famed Machiavellian queen but
also the dramatic events and colourful courtiers (and courtesans)
who shaped French history during her reign . . . must-read
*Richard Foreman, Waterstones Leadenhall Market*
[Catherine de Medici] has often been portrayed as the devil
incarnate, but this gripping biography argues that she was actually
a skilful politician who brokered peace in France during turbulent
times. A real historical treat
*Sainsbury’s Magazine*
Frieda is passionate about her subject, and her prose is lyrical
and exacting. Like a polished stone, it reveals the character
depths beneath mere historical detail as she brings to brilliant
life one of the most fascinating women of the 16th century. What
raises this biography into a tour de force is Frieda's ability to
reframe completely our views about Catherine de Medici. This book
is a remarkable achievement for Frieda, who has given us a
marvellously compelling glimpse into a life led passionately
*Toronto Globe and Mail*
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