GAMES: GameSpot | GameFAQs | SportsGamer MUSIC: Last.fm | MP3.com MOVIES: Metacritic | Movietome TV: TV.com
Home | About Metacritic | About Metascores | What's New | Wireless Versions | Discussion Forums | Advertising Inquiries | Contact Us | RSS
Metacritic.com: We Deal With Criticism
     Help
> Switch to Advanced Search  
Film Video/DVD Music Games TV

Books

All-Time High Scores
Best Of 2006
Best Of 2005
Best Of 2004
How Metascores Are Calculated
Discuss Books In Our Forums

 

Upcoming & Recent Releases

sort by name sort by score

 

Upcoming & Recent Releases

sort by name sort by score

Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed books.

 

 



Printer-Friendly Version Email This Page Discuss In Our Forums

Lucrezia Borgia
Life, Love And Death In Renaissance Italy
by Sarah Bradford

Lucrezia Borgia reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 75 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
N/A out of 10
based on 12 reviews
read critic reviews
how did we calculate this?
based on 0 votes
read user comments
rate this book

The bestselling biographer profiles the illegitimate daughter of Pope Alexander VI, who married three times (the first at the age of 13), was accused of incest, became the Duchess of Ferrara, and, as legend would have it (incorrectly, Bradford explains), was complicit in the assassination of her second husband.

Viking, 421 pages
10/21/2004
$27.95

ISBN: 0670033537

Nonfiction
Biographies & Memoirs

What The Critics Said

All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...

Booklist Margaret Flanagan
Since no portrait of Lucrezia Borgia as a true Renaissance woman would be complete without a trace of scandal, this compelling biography is irresistibly interwoven with plenty of period gossip, sex, and intrigue. [15 Oct. 2004, p. 383]
The Spectator Anne Somerset
Sarah Bradford writes with cool authority and her research in Italian archives is exemplary. No other biography is likely to bring us closer to Lucrezia, even if some aspects of her personality remain indistinct. [9 Oct. 2004, p. 42]
USA Today Dierdre Donahue
Although Bradford brings to life the delights and pleasures of the Italian Renaissance, she does not veer from the ugly truths about the plight of women.
Read Full Review
Wall Street Journal David A. Price
Ms. Bradford's eye for telling detail opens a window on the private life of this strange family.
Read Full Review
Kirkus Reviews
A thoroughly researched, gracefully written revision of the most beguiling Borgia.
Read Full Review
Publishers Weekly
As a project designed to distinguish the historical Lucrezia Borgia from the legend, Bradford's readable biography resoundingly succeeds.
Read Full Review
San Francisco Chronicle Andrea Hoag
This new approach toward the life of a misunderstood woman proves that even long-despised historical figures can be rendered heroines in the end.
Read Full Review
The Independent Clare Colvin
Bradford, returning to the Borgias after biographical forays into the dynasties of the Windsors and Kennedys, makes it clear that Lucrezia, while aware of her father and brother's infamy, was brought up in a world where male dominance was taken for granted.
Read Full Review
The New Republic Ingrid D. Rowland
Bradford's effort to focus on Lucrezia's genteel diplomacy marks a significant departure from Machiavelli's cynical take on many of the same events, and makes it all the more distressing that a woman of this intelligence and spirit should have been relegated by her family and her society to so circumscribed a life.
Read Full Review
Atlantic Monthly Karyn L. Barr
Sarah Bradford paints the duchess in Lucrezia Borgia as a fiercely passionate, astute woman with a talent for using her independence, reputation, and sexual prowess to help mend politically fractured Renaissance Italy. Too often, though, the dense, detailed-laden biography buckles under its own weight.
Read Full Review
The Guardian Kathryn Hughes
Whether the end result - the conclusion that Lucrezia was quite nice really - is sufficiently new or startling to justify keeping faith with nearly 400 dense pages of plotting is unclear. The problem does not lie in Bradford's treatment or research, which is immaculate, but is part of the larger problem of how to deal with biographical subjects who lived at a time when to be a sentient human being meant something very different from what it does today.
Read Full Review
Washington Post James Reston Jr.
One is left with the impression of a writer rummaging through medieval archives, but then neglecting to do the careful sifting and discarding that Virginia Woolf would have admired.
Read Full Review

What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this book is 0.0 (out of 10) based on 0 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Discuss this book in our forums

Return to top of page
Home | FILM | DVD/VIDEO | MUSIC | GAMES | TV | Forums | About Metacritic metacritic.com

Popular on CBS sites: MLB | Spore | iPhone 3G | Paris Hilton | Antivirus Software | GPS | Recipes | Shwayze | NFL

About CBS Interactive | Jobs | Advertise

© 2008 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use