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528 pages, Hardcover
First published October 3, 2024
[Richard and Henry]’s is a story about what happens when a ruler demands loyalty to himself as an individual, rather than a duty to the established constitution. When he seeks to create his own reality rather than concede the force of verifiable truths. When he demands that his own will should trump the rule of law. When he recognizes no interests other than his own. It’s a story about the terrifying unpredictability of unfolding political crises; about the interplay of conflicts within states and between them; about the ways in which authority can be bent, shaped, and broken. Its drama is rooted in family and dynasty, constitution and country, and its themes of power, legitimacy, and the limits of rule and resistance are as urgent now as they have ever been (p. xxix).
Henry’s comprehension of the duties of sovereignty had been substantial, rather than decorative. Had he been born to inherit the throne, he might have been lauded, like his grandfather Edward III, as a “pattern for kings to come.” But, in order to preserve the kingdom, he had had to undo the sacred authority of Richard’s crown and then attempt, somehow, to refashion it in his own image – an attritional task that, year after exhausting year, had made him old before his time (pp. 439-40).