Title: Young Henry
Genre: History
Year: 2011
Pages: 330
Origin: bought from the Works
Nod Rating: 2 nods out of 5
The book’s intention is to chart an outline to the rise of
power of the young Henry. Much information is given on Henry’s childhood:
living with his mother and sisters, the death of his older brother, and then
the coming to the throne on the death of his father in 1509 when in his eighteenth
year. As a fully paid up member of the Tudor Enthusiasts, Hutchinson does an adequate job of painting a
picture of those times in the early years of the sixteenth century.
However, there is little in terms of a clear structure. The
reader is invited to ramble through Henry’s childhood, ambling through various
areas of early Tudor life with no real force; all before being bolted headlong
into the political intrigue of Henry’s early years as king. The concluding
chapters do not feel like any real conclusion at all, with various characters
foisted on the reader with no end goal in sight. Perhaps the reason for this
lies in the intention of the book: where does the historian cut the dividing
line between Henry’s younger years and those of his elder self? Furthermore,
for the reader, the drama comes in full force in those latter years,
particularly from 1530 onwards.
Young Henry is a book that strives to bring the younger
prince to life. But the truth is that this period has been done to death by
many historians; in many cases, it has been achieved with greater success. Therefore,
there is little need in anyone picking up a copy of Hutchinson ’s book in a hurry.