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Namesake

par Sue MacLeod

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It started with a history project. Mr. Gregor assigned a research paper on a figure from the Tudor era, and of course Jane Grey had to pick her namesake-Lady Jane Grey, the fifteen-year-old girl whose parents schemed to place her on the throne of England, then abandoned her to face the executioner. The project is engrossing from the start, but when Jane opens a mysterious prayer book and finds herself in the Tower of London in 1554, she ends up literally drawn into her namesake's story. Soon Jane is slipping into the past whenever the present becomes too unbearable, avoiding her mother's demands, her best friend's fickleness, her crush's indifference. In the tower she plays chess with the imprisoned Lady Jane and is awed by her new friend's strength and courage. And in the tower, keeping vigil as the day of the execution draws near, Jane learns that she too must have the courage to fight for her own happiness.… (plus d'informations)
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3 sur 3
I'm a total nerd for Tudor history AND time travel AND I'm from Halifax so when you put it all together you get this great story. Sue MacLeod's experience as a poet shines through in the perfectly arranged text, words pieced together as only a poet could. Reminiscent of Kit Pearson's Handful of Time with the mother/daughter issues, time travel as an escape from an unpleasant real life. So good. ( )
  annhepburn | Mar 4, 2018 |
Jane was doing a school history project on Lady Jane Gray, her namesake. She delved into her research, transforming herself into the timeperiod and believing she had befriended Lady Jane. She believed she was in a time warp where she lived the past and Lady Jane Gray entered the future and they shared their lives with each other. ( )
  stornelli | Nov 22, 2013 |
I had just finished the first two Wolf Hall books by Hilary Mantel, about Henry VIII's break with Catholicism and it was a stroke of good fortune that I received a copy of Namesake to review right when I was in the zone to appreciate it. The premise of Namesake is effective and intriguing: a current high school student, whose name is Jane Grey, somehow finds a small, illuminated, Book of Prayre among the library books she has taken out to prepare an AP History project on Lady Jane Grey.

The two Janes are linked not only by name, but also by the need for a refuge from the difficulties of their lives. Lady Jane Grey is awaiting beheading in the Tower of London for treason. She had been pushed into occupying the English throne as a Protestant for nine days on the death of her cousin, Henry VIII’s sickly young son Edward VI, until the Privy Council reinstated the more proper claim of his sister, the Catholic Mary.. Modern Jane Grey lives with her alcoholic and unpredictable single mother, a university professor, who is going through the painful end of yet another romance. When each of the Janes turns to the prayer book for peace, they connect through time!

One of the main themes of Namesake is the struggle between the Mary with her supporters and the mass of people already devoted to a more Protestant practice. Lady Jane follows the new faith. She maintains her faith loyally, and although she acquits herself well in discussion with a priest sent by Mary to bring her back to Catholicism, she declines to revert and thereby save her own life, choosing an honest and honourable death. Pretty rich for a YA book, which is ostensibly about teen-age troubles.

There is simply nothing I love more than offering some real, well-researched, history to kids, through a vehicle that engages them. Not at every minute in my life could I have felt as comfortable with the historical reality in this book, so how very fortunate it came to me just now. I loved it, and I will be recommending this book anywhere I can, to any kids, teachers and libraries I encounter.
  souci | Aug 19, 2013 |
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It started with a history project. Mr. Gregor assigned a research paper on a figure from the Tudor era, and of course Jane Grey had to pick her namesake-Lady Jane Grey, the fifteen-year-old girl whose parents schemed to place her on the throne of England, then abandoned her to face the executioner. The project is engrossing from the start, but when Jane opens a mysterious prayer book and finds herself in the Tower of London in 1554, she ends up literally drawn into her namesake's story. Soon Jane is slipping into the past whenever the present becomes too unbearable, avoiding her mother's demands, her best friend's fickleness, her crush's indifference. In the tower she plays chess with the imprisoned Lady Jane and is awed by her new friend's strength and courage. And in the tower, keeping vigil as the day of the execution draws near, Jane learns that she too must have the courage to fight for her own happiness.

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