The Fifth Queen


Read by Elizabeth Klett

(4.3 stars; 46 reviews)

The Fifth Queen trilogy is a series of connected historical novels by English novelist Ford Madox Ford. It consists of three novels, The Fifth Queen; And How She Came to Court (1906), Privy Seal (1907) and The Fifth Queen Crowned (1908), which present a highly fictionalized account of Katharine Howard's marriage to King Henry VIII. (Summary by Wikipedia)

The Fifth Queen
Privy Seal
(7 hr 35 min)

Chapters

Part 1 Chapter 1 29:27 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 2 22:38 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 3 9:40 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 4 10:45 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 5 20:57 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 6 24:16 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 1 Chapter 7 10:22 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 1 28:52 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 2 15:10 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 3 23:30 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 4 20:52 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 5 17:51 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 6 22:58 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 7 47:59 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 8 20:57 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 2 Chapter 9 23:53 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 3 Chapter 1 13:22 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 3 Chapter 2 20:47 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 3 Chapter 3 33:51 Read by Elizabeth Klett
Part 3 Chapter 4 37:50 Read by Elizabeth Klett

Reviews


(4 stars)

The book interested me, but it ends before she is crowned! Please record the other two books, read by the wonderful Elizabeth Klett! No one reads as well as she does...


(5 stars)

very well read. I like how she gave the different characters new voices.


(4 stars)

Not badly done, new insights as to how/what tiny points are needed by Luck-Chance-God’s Will can accomplish that pivot point in time that the seemingly imbedded moss coated rock becomes the rolling stone on which no moss can grow !?!

Is an excellent book


(4 stars)

I might just be sucker for political intrigue and flowered language, but this felt like one of the classics.

Love Elizabeth Klett


(3 stars)

But this book is awful. Pretentious beyond belief.