The Sisters of Lady Jane Grey and Their Wicked Grandfather by Richard Davey
Richard Davey’s book pulls back the curtain on one of the Tudor era’s most heartbreaking footnotes. We know Lady Jane Grey, the ‘Nine Days’ Queen,’ but her story didn’t end with her. This is the tale of what came next for her family, specifically her younger sisters, Katherine and Mary.
The Story
After Jane’s execution, her sisters became massive problems for Queen Mary I and later, Queen Elizabeth I. Why? Because they were also great-granddaughters of Henry VII, giving them a claim to the throne. Their grandfather, Henry Grey, the Duke of Suffolk, is the central, shadowy figure. He’s not a grieving patriarch; he’s portrayed as a man driven by ambition, even after getting one daughter killed. The book follows how he continued to push his remaining daughters into marriages and positions that kept the family in the line of succession, putting them in constant, terrifying danger. We see Katherine and Mary grow up in this pressure cooker, their lives a series of narrow escapes, imprisonment in the Tower, and the constant weight of their name.
Why You Should Read It
Davey writes with a real sense of urgency. He doesn’t just list dates; he makes you feel the claustrophobic fear these women lived with. The real hook is the family dynamic. The ‘wicked grandfather’ isn’t a cartoon villain, but a chillingly realistic portrait of how toxic ambition can poison a family. You root for Katherine and Mary, not as historical figures, but as young women trying to find love, security, and a little bit of freedom while their own bloodline is their greatest curse. It reframes the Tudor narrative from one of glorious kings and queens to one of vulnerable people caught in a machine they never asked to be part of.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone who thinks they’ve heard all the Tudor stories. It’s for readers who love character-driven history, full of personal drama and moral complexity. If you enjoyed the behind-the-scenes tension of Wolf Hall or the focus on marginalized women in books like The Lost Tudor Princess, you’ll devour this. It’s a gripping, human-scale story set against the epic backdrop of royal politics.
This is a copyright-free edition. It is available for public use and education.
John Nguyen
1 year agoHonestly, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. A true masterpiece.