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> Isabel: Jewel of Castilla, Spain, 1466 (The Royal Diaries) |
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Author:
Carolyn Meyer
By Scholastic Inc.
Average Customer Rating:     
List Price: $10.95
Our Price: $3.94
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Binding: Hardcover EAN: 9780439078054 ISBN: 0439078059 Label: Scholastic Inc. Manufacturer: Scholastic Inc. Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 202 Publication Date: 2000-07-01 Publisher: Scholastic Inc. Reading Level: Ages 9-12 Studio: Scholastic Inc. |
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Product Description While waiting anxiously for others to choose a husband for her, Isabella, the future Queen of Spain, keeps a diary account of her life as a member of the royal family.
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    Terrible!, 2009-05-09 We have to read this book for school, and it was so boring the only good part is when they escape, and it doesn't happen until you would have already given up on this. [...]
    Not only Princesses live happily ever after!, 2010-06-14 Princess Isabel is the story of the Queen Isabella who helped Christopher Columbus discover America. The diary takes place during her teen years as she is expected to marry a King or Prince. It's not really her decision. Her life isn't that easy nor is she perfect. She's far from it.
Isabel grew up in a time before the Spanish Inquisition where Jews and non-Christians were forced to convert to Christianity in order to be spared or sent into exile. It's hard to imagine Isabel as an active part of ugly religious wars but she was supportive of the conversions.
Even in this diary, she talks about how it's so much easier to convert to Christianity than to be a Jew in their world. As much as I dislike Isabel's point of view or her radicalistic approach to religion, I understood her as a girl and a princess who didn't have much clout except to be married off well. She wasn't living a stress-free life. She had other issues to deal with like unfriendly relatives, unknown enemies, and allies.
She was a devout Christian who practiced her religion faithfully. I just don't think she understood that other people have the choice to be something different. That is what I disliked about Isabel, that she didn't understand how people can be different in their beliefs and live together.
    Isabel: Jewel of Castilla, Spain, 2010-07-11 Book was in excellent condition, arrived in a timely fashion, and my daughter loved it! Thank you!
    Isabel, Jewel of Castilla, 2007-06-05 This book is very interesting, and, I must admit, kind of funny. It is about the teen-aged Isabel, princess of Castilla, and her brother Enrique's contiual attemps to 'marry her off' to men she hates. In fact, at one point in the book, when Enrique's wife askes if she wants to wear this or that dress to her wedding, she says, 'I would rather wear a buarial shroud!' The reader of this review will be pleased to know the Isabel didn't have to put on a buarial shroud in order to escape marrige. This book is easily one of the better books in the Royal Diaries series. There is a movie to go with the book, and I think that it is very good, but I haven't seen it yet.
    Fanaticism and Madness, 2009-02-24 Isabel, Jewel of Castilla / 0-439-07805-9
A solid addition to the Royal Diary series, Isabel deals with the young adulthood of the queen who would later become the patron of Christopher Columbus. Like all the Royal Diaries, this book may be written for children, but it is equally accessible for adults.
The Good: The diary centers around the dilemmas that Isabel faces as she choses which of her two brothers to support as king, and as she hopes to be married to someone who will not be completely repugnant to her. Isabel is forced to grapple with her conscience as she supports one of her brothers over the other in the struggle for the crown, and she poignantly must face her mother's growing madness that prevents her from recognizing her own children. Isabel displays great strength of will as she maneuvers from a position of weakness to broker a marriage that will not shackle her to someone she hates and fears. Courageously, she defies her brother in order to marry the prince she hopes she can love - a bright young man her equal in age and wit - and this gamble of hers ensures her legacy.
The Bad: This is one of the less quickly paced diaries, partly because Isabel must spend so much time virtually imprisoned by her brother, and yet the potentially exciting scenes of her fleeing for freedom and receiving her bridegroom in secret are passed over quickly and are never dealt on with the detail and attention they deserve. The author also choses - rather cowardly, I feel - to almost completely dodge the issues which make Isabel most notorious, most notably the Spanish Inquisition, the reign of Torquemada, and the purge of the Jews from Spain. Some of this is hinted at - Isabel has a Jewish friend who has converted to Christianity, but whom she suspects is "forever tainted" simply because of her ancestry. And Isabel briefly is forced to switch confessors from the cruel Torquemada to a moderate, loving priest who admonishes Isabel to worry slightly less about her mortal sins and slightly more about "enjoying God's love".
However, despite these superficial touches, the elephant in the room is completely ignored, and this gives the novel a weird, slanted feel. We are told by the author, both in the novel and the epilogue, that Isabel is a good Christian and is only doing what she thought was God's doing. And yet this claim should be examined, not just taken at face value. Isabel is routinely rebellious against her older brother (and, therefore, against her king), she breaks vows regularly, both to her king and to God, and she almost always does exactly what she wants, without regard for the "holiness" of her actions.
This would work into a wonderful novel, if the author was deliberately underscoring the hypocrisy at work here in Isabel, but I do not think that is what we are seeing here. The author seems to have fallen into the trap of sympathizing too much with her subject and seems to believe that Isabel is guilty of no wrong. It is extremely jarring and disappointing to see, in the Epilogue, the Spanish Inquisition swept under the rug in a few meager sentences, with the benediction that Isabel thought she was doing the right thing. I do believe, however, that this novel can be a perfect staging point to discuss with children the hypocrisy of the Inquisition and the importance of religious freedom from tyranny. Thus, I feel that this book is a solid four star book, despite the sometimes soporific pacing, because the topic is interesting and well-researched and because the hypocrisy of Isabel shine brightly through these pages and provide a valuable lesson to those who would consider the implications.
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