George is rigorous in her study and in her debut of the minutiae of the period. Elizabeth's unchangeable years are documented meticulously down to the detailed details of her menopause and her consternation when presented with a flushing can for the inception time. George leaves no cadre unexamined, but toward the mid of the untried readers might fancy she had.
The romance could have benefitted from a swifter pace, for characters to do more and divulge less, for a skeleton shaped to build suspense. In short, more unfamiliar and less biography would have been better. In the end, though, George gives readers an uncommon study of an uncommon woman, a crowned head of labyrinthine paradoxes and unswerving principles. She took "England as her spouse," making her virginity "a perceptible sacrifice" that resolved her to her subjects, allowing her to attend to the most stalwart men in her empire at her side as equals.
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