Almost a thousand years ago, the Battle of Hastings decided the future of England and half the modern world. Less well known are the six and half decades leading up to it: bloody wars, intrigues and sexual politics, in which three peoples vied for supremacy over the Island Kingdom. In this epic retelling of those critical years, master storyteller Don Hollway (author of the bestselling The Last Viking and At the Gates of Rome) recounts the clash of barbarian warlords, their rival queens, and their generations-long battle for supremacy.
• English king Aethelred the Unready, who begins the millennium with bloodshed…
• Viking Svein Forkbeard, whose vengeance wins him the English crown…briefly…
• His son Cnut the Great, forging three nations into a North Sea Empire…
• His Saxon consort Aelfgifu, ruling in his stead and scheming for England’s throne…
• Her archenemy Emma of Normandy, claiming Cnut’s realm in exchange for her body…
• Their sons, kings Harefoot and Harthacnut, weapons in their mothers’ wars…
• Uhtred the Bold, ealdorman of Northumbria, whose wavering loyalty is his downfall…
• Edward the Confessor, king, yet a tool of his quarreling lords, his very bed a battleground…
• Godwin of Wessex, playing all sides to make himself the most powerful man in England…
• Earl Harold Godwinson, sacrificing his family and risking the realm for his father's dream…
• Harold's brother Tostig, exiled, bitter and willing to sell his soul to the Vikings for a crown…
• Norwegian king Harald Hardrada, mounting one last attempt to make England Viking again…
• And William the Bastard, finally winning his dukedom, now aspiring to win a kingdom….
In a sweeping saga recalling Game of Thrones, The Last Kingdom, and Vikings Valhalla, all these and more fight to the death, when only one can rule supreme: the Battle for the Island Kingdom.
EPOCH TIMES
TOP 5 BEST HISTORY BOOK OF 2023
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REVIEWS:
Mr. Hollway meticulously ties all of the elements together into a cohesive story and timeline…. Exhaustively researched and sourced, and exceptionally written, Mr. Hollway has assembled another masterclass in how to tell a multi-faceted story of history in one fell swoop. For those looking to get a grasp on early English history and the beginnings of the British monarchy, “Battle for the Island Kingdom” is a perfect selection. For those simply looking for a fun, yet bloody read, you can’t go wrong with Mr. Hollway’s latest.
The Epoch Times
This new book by Don Hollway ambitiously sets out to describe the complex interplay between competing European royal houses during what academics call ‘The Second Viking Age’.... Men and women feature in equal measure in the book, and family inter-relationships become important threads throughout the narrative. The author brings to life the Court intrigues and bitter rivalries dividing Europe’s nobility, shedding light on an otherwise dark period of our history, when judicial murder and a resort to arms was the norm.
ThePast.com
In his latest work on this era, the author brings this period to vivid life through engaging prose, a coherent narrative and a mind for the most minute yet interesting detail. The references from relevant source material are plentiful but do not bog down the storytelling. This book is lively and easy to read. Most readers know about the Battle of Hastings and its outcome and while this book informs on that event, fewer know about the events leading up to it, but this work delivers that to the reader as well.
Warfare History Network
The author brings to life the court intrigues and bitter rivalries dividing Europe’s nobility, shedding light on an otherwise dark period of our history, when judicial murder and a resort to arms was the norm. The narrative builds on the evidence of Scandinavian sagas, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and the works of Norman historians.... Battle for the Island Kingdom is thoroughly enjoyable, and is recommended to anyone looking for a comprehensive and accessible history of the period.
Military History Matters
Hollway’s book is anything but dry. At every turn, he infuses his accounts with a novelist’s flair.... Hollway makes it feel so loud and headlong that the story feels both new and unpredictable. Just as with The Last Viking,