The Wolf Hall Trilogy - Bring Up the Bodies (The Wolf Hall Trilogy): TV tie-in edition

By Hilary Mantel

Now a major TV series

Winner of the Man Booker Prize

Winner of the Costa Book of the Year

Shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction

‘Simply exceptional…I envy anyone who hasn’t yet read it’Daily Mail

‘A gripping story of tumbling fury and terror’Independent on Sunday

Bring Up the Bodies unlocks the darkly glittering court of Henry VIII, where Thomas Cromwell is now chief minister. With Henry captivated by plain Jane Seymour and rumours of Anne Boleyn’s faithlessness whispered by all, Cromwell knows what he must do to secure his position. But the bloody theatre of the queen’s final days will leave no one unscathed …

Heralded as the greatest English novels of this century, the Wolf Hall trilogy has won two Booker Prizes and been adapted into hugely successful stage plays. The first two books, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies, were transformed into a BAFTA- and Golden Globe-winning BBC television series, starring Mark Rylance and Damian Lewis. The cast now returns in the long-awaited concluding series, Wolf Hall: The Mirror & the Light.

Format: Paperback
Release Date: 07 Nov 2024
Pages: 432
ISBN: 978-0-00-874957-6
Detailed Edition: TV tie-in edition
Dame Hilary Mantel was one of the greatest English novelists of our time, best known for her epic The Wolf Hall Trilogy. She won the Man Booker Prize twice, for Wolf Hall and its sequel Bring Up the Bodies, which also won the Costa Book of the Year. The conclusion of the trilogy, The Mirror & the Light, was an instant number one bestseller and winner of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, which she had also won for Wolf Hall. Mantel is the author of fourteen other acclaimed books, including A Place of Greater Safety, Beyond Black, the memoir Giving Up the Ghost and the short story collection The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher.

”'This is a bloody story about the death of Anne Boleyn, but Hilary Mantel is a writer who thinks through the blood. She uses her power of prose to create moral ambiguity and the real uncertainty of political life … She has recast the most essential period of our modern English history; we have the greatest modern English prose writer reviving possibly one of the best known pieces of English history” - Sir Peter Stothard, Chair of the judges for the Man Booker Prize 2012

”'Simply exceptional … I envy anyone who hasn’t yet read it” - Sandra Parsons, Daily Mail

”'In another league. This ongoing story of Henry VIII’s right-hand man is the finest piece of historical fiction I have ever read. A staggering achievement” - Sarah Crompton, Sunday Telegraph

”'Succeeds brilliantly in every particle … it’s an imaginative achievement to exhaust superlatives” - Spectator

”'Wolf Hall was a tour de force, but its sequel is leaner, more brilliant, more shocking than its predecessor” - Erica Wagner, The Times

”'Picks up the body parts where Wolf Hall left off … literary invention does not fail her: she's as deft and verbally adroit as ever” - Margaret Atwood, Guardian

”'Mantel in the voice of Cromwell is inspired. When she is in full flow as a novelist, creating scenes and inventing dialogue, she is more convincing than rendering a recorded scene from history” - Philippa Gregory, Sunday Express

”'Don’t think you can start this book whenever you feel like it - plan ahead, as, once started, it’s impossible to escape its grip, and until it’s finished, you won’t get any sleep” - Country Life