Kirkus Reviews QR Code
COEUR DE LION by Isla Tate

COEUR DE LION

by Isla Tate

Pub Date: May 13th, 2020
Publisher: Self

In this historical novel, Tate envisions the many triumphs and passions of Richard the Lionheart.

The author frames her story as six volumes of the polarizing king’s journal, concluding with his last letter to his queen, Berengaria. Richard narrates throughout, beginning with his early status as Duke of Aquitaine, the tensions between his father, Henry II, and Thomas Becket, the adviser whom Henry would infamously murder, and his own lengthy rebellion against his father. In early adulthood, Richard asserts his authority by engaging in jousting tournaments, exacting vengeance on rapists and mercenaries, and mounting his first military campaign against Henry in Paris, with King Louis VII of France. Although Richard eventually acknowledges the supremacy of his father’s rule, he also does what Henry could not, capturing the “unassailable” fortress at Taillebourg in France. Tate’s book is as much a romance as a thriller, particularly when Richard speaks of Berengaria; when they first meet, he reflects, “I am not sure how long we stood there, staring at each other.” His dedication to her is constant, and when she becomes pregnant with their child, the knowledge buoys Richard through later military campaigns. Over the course of the novel, Richard captures the French commune of Gorre, defeats Isaac Comnenus of Cyprus, and forges a memorable truce with the sultan Saladin, ultimately emerging victorious in the Third Crusade. In the gritty conclusion, Richard meets his prolonged death at the hands of a mocking archer when gangrene from a crossbow-bolt wound spreads; he recounts in the final entry that he knows his death approaches and that “we cannot amputate my back.” A postscript describes the later lives of several main characters, adding depth to an already rich narrative. In thoroughly detailed prose, Tate pays careful attention to Richard’s personality and perspective, dwelling on both his thunderous moods and softer emotional connections. Overall, he crafts the king as a sympathetic character whom readers will root for—a classic figure with a somewhat modernist twist.

An adroit depiction of an adventurous life.