tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8300736249155978983.post4801679759054343613..comments2014-07-24T13:39:32.468+05:30Comments on The Bookworm's Diary: Life and Times of Thomas CromwellTime Travellerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02855573858730080091noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8300736249155978983.post-15183666522758195572011-07-27T16:56:30.407+05:302011-07-27T16:56:30.407+05:30I agree about the confusion with using 'he'...I agree about the confusion with using 'he' I had to back up several times to make sure what was what and who was whom.A thoroughly entertaining read, I would love to have visited Austin Friars house, and sampled some of the interesting cuisine! It was an unexpected aspect to find the sainted Sir Thomas more being depicted as a thoroughly unpleasant human being, and good old Thomas Cromwell, as a really rather humane sympathetic characterAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8300736249155978983.post-1345780394263171882011-06-25T13:25:33.982+05:302011-06-25T13:25:33.982+05:30I did not study history in college, so I don't...I did not study history in college, so I don't have the same perspective. As a layman, I still found it an interesting read.KR Sriramnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8300736249155978983.post-19345035038791058872011-06-19T12:55:57.943+05:302011-06-19T12:55:57.943+05:30Well written, as a historical novel, even if the a...Well written, as a historical novel, even if the allusions are deliberately obscure. Guess one needs to be a history buff or a history student to understand the history against which this is played out.narayanan.bhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08296739019194956913noreply@blogger.com