Description
Book Synopsis''A startling heroine'' SARAH MOSS, author of Summerwater
''A vividly female perspective on the Wars of the Roses'' IMOGEN HERMES GOWER, author of The Mermaid and Mr Hancock
''Wolf Hall for the 2020s'' MANDA SCOTT, author of Boudica
''Absorbing'' TIMES
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1431 is a dangerous time for a woman to be defiant.
England has been fighting France for 100 years. At home, power-hungry men within a corrupt government manipulate a weak king - and name Cecily''s husband, York''s loyal duke, an enemy. As the king''s grasp on sanity weakens, plots to destroy York take root...
It will take all of Cecily''s courage and cunning to save her family. But when the will to survive becomes ambition for a crown, will she risk treason to secure it?
Inside closed bedchambers and upon bloody battlefields, CECILY portrays war as women fight it.
TO CO
Trade Review
A startling heroine -- Sarah Moss
In vigorous, direct prose Garthwaite grippingly resurrects a remarkable woman * Sunday Times *
Utterly compelling, this brilliant novel shines a light into a dark corner of our history and reclaims the voice and story of a powerful and forgotten woman. A phenomenal read. I loved it -- Liz Hyder, author of The Gifts
Has the new Hilary Mantel arrived? * Sunday Telegraph *
I look forward to hearing more from Annie Garthwaite and Cecily * Times *
Cecily is a vivid and compelling portrait of a formidable figure from the 15th century and a heroine for our times * Big Issue *
In Garthwaite's hands, Neville proves as Machiavellian, manipulative and era-defining as any man * Noon *
Cecily stalks the corridors of power like a female Thomas Cromwell. A vividly female perspective on the Wars of the Roses - what a feat -- Imogen Hermes Gowar
An extraordinary achievement . . . I could touch and breathe Cecily's world as if I was walking in her shadow -- Carol McGrath
CECILY is the WOLF HALL for the 2020s... marks the start of a stellar career -- Manda Scott
I loved it . . . Annie Garthwaite writes about the past with a kind of restrained, earthy vim, and with the sort of intimacy and immediacy - and empathy - that can only come from graft and craft -- Toby Clements