Patriot or Traitor: The Life and Death of Sir Walter Ralegh

by Anna Beer

Hardcover, 2018

Status

Available

Call number

942.055092

Collections

Publication

Oneworld Publications (2018), 336 pages

Description

"Sir Walter Ralegh's life is romantic, irresistible and of central importance to our island story. His death is a convoluted and contested tale of bargaining, failure and betrayal. Through the Elizabethan golden age and Ralegh's famous adventures to the final act, Anna Beer presents his stranger-than-fiction life in all its richness. How could a man once the Queen's favourite find himself consigned to the Tower by her successor? Should his legacy be fame or infamy? Who was the real Sir Walter Ralegh?"--Provided by publisher.

User reviews

LibraryThing member gmicksmith
One of the more interesting but controversial figures in naval history is Sir Walter Raleigh. He may be seen as a prominent exponent of England’s rise to naval power but on the other hand he may be seen as a run-of-the-mill pirate. The volume examines these two options to illuminate the life of
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England’s controversial knight and privateer.
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LibraryThing member RhodestoRome
Good book overall. Interesting concept and story.
LibraryThing member Chrisethier
Disclaimer: I won an ARC of this title via Netgalley.

When you actually sit down and think about, what exactly did Sir Walter Ralegh actually do to deserve almost being a household name in today’s world? You are more likely to have heard of him than Robert Cecil. He is one of the famous prisoners
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of the Tower of London, isn’t he? Thankfully, Anna Beer’s new book partially answers that question. In fact, she answers it as much as is humanly possible.
The book is less an examination of whether Ralegh was a traitor but how much he truly relied on self-promotion and proclamation. It is about treading the minefields that were political life in both Elizabeth and early Jacobean English court history.
While it is helpful to have a working knowledge of English history during the closing years of Elizabeth’s reign and the beginning of James, Beer’s writing is very engaging, and the pace is lively. The chapters each deal an aspect of Ralegh – solider, husband, and on – and what is undoubtedly more engrossing than a simpler linear biography.
What really sells the book are the subtle, at times funny, asides, such her musing about a codpiece, and her ability to not see her subject through rose-colored glasses. There are examinations of Ralegh’s various relationships – in particular with his wife and with his rivals. While one can’t say a better knowing of Ralegh as a man is a result of this book, one does get a better idea of how when he lived affected him. It doesn’t make Ralegh into your drinking mate, but it deepens your understanding.
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LibraryThing member Angelic55blonde
I received an advance copy as part of the Early Reviewers. Because it's an advanced copy it's missing some of the things like the index but did have "works consulted". The chronology at the end of the book was helpful to keep everything in line in my mind and helpful for anyone not as familiar with
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the time period.

This is an interesting book about a man who has been called many things, both during his life and after. He's usually tied to Queen Elizabeth and is eclipsed by her but this book helps his life stand on his own. I enjoy the way the author writes and she even explains the spelling and pronunciation of his name at the beginning which I thought was interesting and gets the reader a little in her head. Overall I did enjoy reading this.
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LibraryThing member MarysGirl
I didn't know much about Sir Walter Ralegh (the author's choice of spelling) except some hazy memories from high school about pirating and putting his cloak over a puddle (?) so Elizabeth I wouldn't get her feet wet. Beer covered the pirating/exploring (among many other topics), but not the muddy
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cloak, so I must have made that up. I found the book informative, well-researched and organized, and easy to read. The author used an interesting format, based on roles (soldier, courtier, lover, writer, etc.), to explore Ralegh's life and death. The topics are roughly chronological with considerable overlap, but works. Ralegh was a fascinating character who led a colorful life of adventure and romance. We know so much about him, compared to his contemporaries, because he was also a brilliant writer and self-promoter. The book left me wanting to know more about his formidable wife Bess Throckmorton who managed his affairs while he was at sea and lobbied tirelessly for his release while he was in prison. I see that Anna Beer wrote a biography of the Lady Bess as well as her husband. I know what my next read will be!
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LibraryThing member TheCriticalTimes
I'm writing this review with mixed feelings, not because I can't make up my mind if this book is good or not, it is in fact quite good. Instead the contents of this work of descriptive history needs to be evaluated against modern approaches to teaching history. I'm going to try to explain what I
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mean by that.

When you're writing a novel you want to begin with a bang, you want to make the reader interested. It's a modern approach to fiction writing we can trace back to Goethe and his short novel: The Suffering of Young Werther. That novel starts with: I'm so glad I don't ever have to be here again. It puts you right in the scene and sets up the mood of everything that follows. Later on novelists and especially screenwriters have picked this up and refined it to an art. E.g. if you can't engage a movie audience in the first 10 minutes you've lost them.

In this book about Sir Walter Ralegh, by Anna Beer, the same approach is used. We immediately learn in graphic detail how the protagonist meets his ending. So the question is: does the effect of starting with a bang work for non-fiction as well? I think it does, even though I don't like that it does. Chances are I'm too old and set in my ways to appreciate what this format can do for learning about historical facts, but it felt too forced, too on the nose. It does work though, it does get you engaged and connected to a human being who lived a very long time ago in a period where daily life was a lot more brutal to say the least.

Ironically the author goes against the 'novel' approach of the book by adding lots of detail that gets in the way and doesn't add to our knowledge of who this person Ralegh was. This could easily have been fixed by using footnotes and end notes. Providing a listing of names who were involved in certain event in Ralegh's life, although historically relevant, gets in the way of following the narrative. At some point you simply read over it because trying to remember all those names simply doesn't work and doesn't help.

Overall I appreciated the human aspects and approach. This otherwise abstract from long ago became a crisp clear individual in my mind. As such I think some of the extrapolations and interpretations the author makes are fully warranted. More so because they are noted and indicated.

We're living in an age where the skill of writing is applied to otherwise dry subjects like history. I wish all high school history books were written in the same style and manner as this biography.
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LibraryThing member dougcornelius
Sir Walter Raleigh, a poet, an adventurer, a soldier, is one of the most notable figures of the Elizabethan golden age. I assume that's mostly because he was such a gifted writer, while other notable figures left behind much less prolific written records.

Ms. Beer clearly finds Sir Walter an
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irresistible figure. She finds intrigue, wonder and excitement where I did not.

I fault myself.

I picked up a review copy of the book from the publisher to learn more. I think the writer assumes the reader knows a bit about Sir Walter and the history of the times. I knew very little, but after reading, feel like I know a lot more about the era.

But I don't find Raleigh any more compelling than I did before reading the book.
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LibraryThing member smithwil
Half way through, I wasn't sure I could finish. I was disappointed there was not more about the Roanoke Island story, but now realized he was hardly involved. Once he was 'dead' and put in the Tower, the story actually improved, as far as readability was concerned. This is a book for those
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seriously interested in the subject, Sir Walter Raleigh. I learned much that I didn't know, and was fairly satisfied by the end. That seems to be a positive.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

336 p.; 9.2 inches

ISBN

1786074346 / 9781786074348

Barcode

91120000468188

DDC/MDS

942.055092
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