Cover Image: The Forgotten Sister

The Forgotten Sister

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

Lizzie Kingdom is a children's TV presenter, her best friend from school Dudley Lester is the lead singer in a rock band. When Dudley's wife Amelia dies in mysterious circumstances Dudley and Lizzie fall under suspicion. But there are parallels with events which happened in Tudor times where Amelia's ancestor Amy was married to Robert Dudley, first Earl of Leicester and lover of Queen Elizabeth.

Alternating between Lizzie's POV in the present day and Amy's POV in the 1500s we learn of how Amy Robsart married Robert Dudley but all too soon her husband's obsession with his childhood friend the Princess Elizabeth draws them into the often lethal politics after the death of Henry VIII. How Amy and her sister Anna sit on opposite sides of the religious division, Anna married to a papist supporter of Princess Mary and RObert Dudley's family supporting Lady Jane Grey and Princess Elizabeth.

In the present day Lizzie comes to realise that she has put her trust in the wrong people, things are not what they seem and it falls on her to uncover the truth about the Robsart family and a pattern that has repeated itself throughout history.

I guessed the truth behind Amelia's death quite early on,(view spoiler) but I really enjoyed the insights into the political machinations of Dudley and his family, the way in which a family could rise to power one minute and then be locked in the Tower of London the next.

Part history lesson, part mystery, part romance this was an engaging read that kept me on tenterhooks right to the end.

I received a free copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Was this review helpful?
I just couldn't get into this book. I found the present day character Lizzie irritating and all of the names of the people mirroring the Elizabethan names was a bit annoying.
Sorry.
Was this review helpful?
A beautiful, atmospheric, time slip novel that sweeps you off to another place and another time.
Fans of Lucinda Riley and Kate Morton will love this book, it is just sublime.
Was this review helpful?
I liked the premise of the book,  but it didn't quite deliver.  I found it a bit formulaic and while it made pleasant enough reading didn't stand out for me.
Was this review helpful?
The Forgotten Sister, Nicola Cornick

Review from Jeannie Zelos book reviews

Genre: General Fiction (Adult) , Historical Fiction

I didn't realise this was a historical/contemporary story, thought it was a straight historical one but it wasn't an issue, as I really enjoy those kind of reads too. This reminds me very much of Susanna Kearsely's reads, stories I used to devour but somehow  haven't read for ages. Having dipped back into the genre maybe I'll look for more. 

Anyway, the story is in an alternate chapters past and present format. I've always felt a bit sorry for historical Amy Robsart. Back then ladies were married off for family and political allies, were just pawns in the scramble for power, and poor Amy ended up married to a fiercely ambitious man who became a favourite of the Queen. Childless, she was left languishing on his rural estates or shipped off to stay with others, while he courted the realms of power and intrigued with Queen Elizabeth 1.

Present day Amy seems in the same trap, married to a man who seems to spend more time with his childhood friend Lizzie than he does with her. Its not as simple as that though, and the parallels from the past enmesh with the present day characters. I wanted to say to Amy, shout at him, rage, don't let him get away with it but of course it doesn't work like that. 

There's some great characters here. I really liked Lizzie, Arthur and Johnny, but found it hard to warm to Amy and her sister Anna. Amy seemed weak, passive and her sister Anna was angry against the world after their mother died. As for Dudley, well, sadly there are a host of selfish characters like him in all walks of life, he really was shallow and obnoxious. Its difficult to write much about the actual story with giving away details that may spoil it for some. 
The supernatural element added an extra frisson of excitement and danger, and was played out in a very believable way. I'm kind of open minded about supernatural events, think back to earlier periods in history where electricity would seem like magic, where a camera that could reproduce likenesses would be seen as mysterious, and maybe its just that we don't yet fully understand everything in our world. Then read this book with that mindset and you'll really enjoy it if you like this kind of romance, very gentle and subtle but wrapped up in a delicious historical mystery. 

Stars: Four and a half, a really fun read, merging past and present perfectly. 

ARC supplied by Netgalley and publisher
Was this review helpful?
#TheForgottenSister #NetGalley
I couldn't put it down. Perfect for the fans of historical fiction with mystry.
1560: Amy Robsart is trapped in a loveless marriage to Robert Dudley, a member of the court of Queen Elizabeth I. Present Day: When Lizzie Kingdom is forced to withdraw from the public eye in a blaze of scandal, it seems her life is over. 
Told in two POV'S and it did justice with both of them. 
Highly recommended.
Was this review helpful?