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- The Red Queen's Daughter
The Red Queen's Daughter
Author(s)
Publisher
Genre(s)
Age Range
12+
ISBN
1423107977
User reviews
2 reviews
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
4.0(2)
Characters
N/A(0)
Writing Style
N/A(0)
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A(0)
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Historical Fiction with Magic!
(Updated: June 26, 2026)
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
4.0
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Reader reviewed by Deirdre
This is the tale of Mary Seymour, the orphaned daughter of Katherine Parr the last Queen of King Henry XIII and the disgraced Thomas Seymour. This is an epic story that involves white snakes, evil cousins, bashful ladies-in-waiting, and a regal virgin Queen, Elizabeth I. Mary may be from a royal bloodline but she must work her way up to the high place in England that her mother lost by marrying her father. Add magic, love, and evil and you end up with an amazing story.
I would give this book 4 stars out of 5 because of the writing style and the great usage of history. Although this book is based on real events, it wont bore you.
The worst thing about this book was that they didnt really go into detail about some of the major English historical figures. Then again, this is a novel not a history book. This book is historical fiction because Mary the daughter of Katherine really existed; the rest of the story is the authors imagination.
This is the tale of Mary Seymour, the orphaned daughter of Katherine Parr the last Queen of King Henry XIII and the disgraced Thomas Seymour. This is an epic story that involves white snakes, evil cousins, bashful ladies-in-waiting, and a regal virgin Queen, Elizabeth I. Mary may be from a royal bloodline but she must work her way up to the high place in England that her mother lost by marrying her father. Add magic, love, and evil and you end up with an amazing story.
I would give this book 4 stars out of 5 because of the writing style and the great usage of history. Although this book is based on real events, it wont bore you.
The worst thing about this book was that they didnt really go into detail about some of the major English historical figures. Then again, this is a novel not a history book. This book is historical fiction because Mary the daughter of Katherine really existed; the rest of the story is the authors imagination.
G
Guest
Well-done historical fiction with a twist
(Updated: June 26, 2026)
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
4.0
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Reader reviewed by Iron Pyrate
Mary is the daughter of Henry VIII's last wife, Katherine Parr, but her farther was Katherine's second husband, the treasonous Thomas Seymour. With both her parents executed and her guardian now also dead, nine-year-old Mary is taken into the custody of Lady Strange, a woman with an air of mystery about her.
Mary learns that Lady Strange will be her teacher, but not in stitching and mending. No, Mary is to become a white magicianand a white magician with a destiny at that. Her future is to protect Queen Elizabeth from "romantic intoxication" and prevent her downfall.
As the years pass Mary's skills grow until, at sixteen, she is ready to move to Whitehall palace and become one of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting. Here Mary must at once learn the schemes of Court life and discover the deepest part of her magic. Fortunately her ability to see auras allows her to learn something of a person's intentions, but there is one she cannot see: Her cousin, Edmund Seymour, a powerful and possibly dangerous young man who is also a magician...but a dark one. The plots for power increase a notch with magic to an exciting and unique novel of a little-known historical girl, The Red Queen's Daughter.
Jacqueline Kolosov does a fantastic job of portraying Elizabethan England with an element of magic without overdoing it; no abracadabra spells, but believable ones of seeing, knowing, and understanding.
I will admit that the end was kind of rushed, with some plotlines left hanging, and the romance was a little unsatisfactory, but mayhap a sequel would take care of those small things.
Mary is the daughter of Henry VIII's last wife, Katherine Parr, but her farther was Katherine's second husband, the treasonous Thomas Seymour. With both her parents executed and her guardian now also dead, nine-year-old Mary is taken into the custody of Lady Strange, a woman with an air of mystery about her.
Mary learns that Lady Strange will be her teacher, but not in stitching and mending. No, Mary is to become a white magicianand a white magician with a destiny at that. Her future is to protect Queen Elizabeth from "romantic intoxication" and prevent her downfall.
As the years pass Mary's skills grow until, at sixteen, she is ready to move to Whitehall palace and become one of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting. Here Mary must at once learn the schemes of Court life and discover the deepest part of her magic. Fortunately her ability to see auras allows her to learn something of a person's intentions, but there is one she cannot see: Her cousin, Edmund Seymour, a powerful and possibly dangerous young man who is also a magician...but a dark one. The plots for power increase a notch with magic to an exciting and unique novel of a little-known historical girl, The Red Queen's Daughter.
Jacqueline Kolosov does a fantastic job of portraying Elizabethan England with an element of magic without overdoing it; no abracadabra spells, but believable ones of seeing, knowing, and understanding.
I will admit that the end was kind of rushed, with some plotlines left hanging, and the romance was a little unsatisfactory, but mayhap a sequel would take care of those small things.
G
Guest



