Queen's Own Fool: A Novel of Mary Queen of Scots

by Jane Yolen

Hardcover, 2000

Status

Available

Publication

Philomel (2000), Hardcover

Description

When twelve-year-old Nicola leaves Troupe Brufort and serves as the fool for Mary, Queen of Scots, she experiences the political and religious upheavals in both France and Scotland.

User reviews

LibraryThing member MichelleCH
I very much enjoyed how this story unwound surrounding the life of Queen Mary of Scots. It also gave a unique perspective as it was written from the viewpoint of the Queen's fool, Nicola, also known as La Jardiniere. The author kept the tone light which made it enjoyable and entertaining. It was
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also a quick read and I had a hard time putting it down.
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LibraryThing member sara_k
Queens Own Fool is a novel of Mary Queen of Scots. I suppose this is a children's book but it certainly appeals to adults. This is a lovely telling of the story of Mary Queen of Scots through the voice and eyes of her Fool. The story is anchored in facts of history and floats on the invention and
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detail of Ms. Yolen and Mr. Harris. Nicola Ambruzzi is part of her Uncle's performing troup until they entertain Queen Mary and her husband, the young King of France. Nicola's wit and unjaded perspective are refreshing and the Queen rescues Nicola from her abusive uncle and takes her off to be part of the Court.

Nicola travels with the Queen through the death of the King, exile to Scotland where Queen Mary struggles with the lines between politics, power, and life as a woman. Nicola also struggles with those delineations in regard to her own life and those of her Queen. There is some romance and forced kisses (not part of the romance!) but nothing prurient.

This is a wonderfully written book. How well? Even though I knew the history, I read to the end with anxious hope for both lives.

I'd recommend this book to these people I know: A teacher in her 30's who likes historical fiction, an 11 year old girl who likes fiction and appreciates knowing the motivation of "villains", a 9 year old girl who has read Jane Yolen's work before and just finished a project about Mary Queen of Scots, and a woman in her 40's who reads large amounts of books.
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LibraryThing member onefear
My 8-year-old and I both really enjoyed this book. It was an engaging, well-written story that neither one of us wanted to put down, and it makes us both want to learn more about this time period. I was initially concerned that the more violent and baudy subject matter would be inappropriate for an
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8-year-old, but Yolen and Harris keep it age-appropriate (although I think it is written for a slightly older age group, so it may not be right for *all* 8-year-olds). --rwj
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LibraryThing member willowwaw
The Queen's Own Fool is a novel about Mary Queen of Scots told by her court fool that she aquires in France. Filled with court intrigue, adventure, and the lure of realism this novel held my attention till the bitter end. I loved how the authors made the readers want to learn more about such an
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epic queen and time period.
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LibraryThing member shifrack00
The best. Perfectly written and a great story. I really enjoyed.
LibraryThing member Whisper1
If you like historical fiction, you might enjoy this well written book of Mary Queen of Scots from the perspective of her fool Nicola Ambruzzi.

If you can suspend the disbelief that a court jester would be as intimate and friendly with the Queen, then read along in this magical tale of intrigue,
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back stabbing plots and incredible sadness as Nicola shows the beauty and the folly of her much loved Queen.

Traveling in a ragley, tagley troupe of entertainers, orphaned Nicola is a savvy, quick witted, intelligent peasant girl who catches the eye of Mary. Her life changes dramatically when she becomes the court fool. She grows to love her master and sadly watches as Mary's life spins out of control.

Nicola is well aware that the Queen rules with her heart and not her head as we observe the many reckless decisions that lead to her downfall.

Recommended for the good writing and Yolen's wonderful ability to weave magic.
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LibraryThing member nellista
A good YA rendition on the story of Mary Queen of Scots. The main character Nicola, is fictional, and a performer taken into the queen's household as a jester or fool. Being both fictional and a fool, she is able to speak her mind plainly, and tell the story from a quite personal aspect.
LibraryThing member frozenplums
This was a nice change from the usual historical royalty books I read. Mary Queen of Scots is without question this story's main focus, but it is told from the point of view of one of her court jesters. The portrayal of Mary in this rendition was fantastic - much truer to life. I find Mary is often
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depicted as a heartless, power hungry banshee, and that was not the case at all; she was very intelligent and very kind and generous - forced into situations by the malicious doings of her handlers.

Really spectacular book. 5 stars.
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LibraryThing member lauriebrown54
“Queen’s Own Fool” is Nicola, who is given the nickname ‘La Jardiniere’. La Jardinaiere was real, although we know almost nothing about her. Yolan and Harris have used her as a lens to view the life of Mary Stuart, the Queen of France and of Scotland.

Mary, at the time Queen of France,
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buys orphaned Nicola from her uncle’s entertainment troop when she is a girl. Nicola is witty and, more important, honest. Mary values honesty above all- she hears so little of it at court- and relies on Nicola to remind her that she, despite being Queen, is mortal like her subjects. The novel takes us through the death of the young King of France and Mary’s decision to live in Scotland, so she can rule rather than being an extraneous female for her uncles to marry off to further their political aims. This turns out to be a bad decision; Scotland is full of internal strife between Catholics (which Mary is one of) and the Protestant rebels. She walks into this situation fairly blindly and makes her situation worse by marrying pretty boy Lord Darnley. No one likes Darnley; he’s ambitious politically but mannerless, forces himself on serving women, cares nothing for the people of Scotland, and rather reminds me of Donald Trump. Mary is helpless as rebels take over the country.

I’ve never much cared for Mary Stuart; she always struck me as fairly witless and ruled by her heart rather than attempting good governance - not good traits in a queen. Seeing her through Nicola’s eyes, though, I could see other sides to Mary; she was kind and smart (in book learning, at least). She was a woman in the wrong place at the wrong time; a pawn of first her uncles, then the rebels, then prisoner of her cousin Elizabeth I of England. Other than her years at the court of France, she led a pretty sad life. Nicola’s version of Mary made me sympathetic to her as a woman who cared deeply for her friends and her people.

Nicola herself is witty, brave, and fast thinking. She acts as Mary’s eyes and ears when Mary is held prisoner and helps her out of several scrapes. Nicola is almost too good to be true, but I enjoyed her and think she makes a great heroine for the YA crowd for which this book was written. This was a fast, couldn’t put it down read for me. While I knew there could be no happy ending for Queen Mary, I couldn’t help but be rooting for her and being tense over a lot of the scenes, hoping for the best. Great book.
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LibraryThing member AltheaAnn
Enjoyable YA historical fiction, from the point of view of Mary, Queen of Scots' court jester.
I tend to like Jane Yolen, and this book did not disappoint, even though it is co-written (by Robert J. Harris - don't know much about him as a writer). It is a little juvenile in tone, more so than some
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YA books - it's an entertaining, fast-paced light read.
I did find myself wishing for a bit more depth and complexity, and more historical detail - but I still enjoyed it 4-stars' worth.
Plus - excellent and appropriate cover art by Cynthia von Buhler.
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Language

Original publication date

2001

Physical description

390 p.; 9.31 inches

ISBN

0399233806 / 9780399233807

Barcode

5499
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