Editors Reads
Historical FictionLiterary Fiction

Hilary Mantel

British · b. 1952

3 books reviewed Avg rating 4.4 / 5Top rating 4.4 / 5

Man Booker Prize (2009, 2012)

Hilary Mantel was a British novelist who won the Man Booker Prize twice for Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies, her extraordinary reimagining of Thomas Cromwell's rise through Henry VIII's court.

Hilary Mantel spent decades as one of Britain’s most admired novelists before Wolf Hall — published in 2009 — brought her to the broadest possible readership and won her the first of two Man Booker Prizes. The novel resurrects Thomas Cromwell, Henry VIII’s fixer and enforcer, as one of the most psychologically complex protagonists in historical fiction. Mantel’s Cromwell is not the villain of traditional Tudor narrative but a man of formidable intelligence and ambition, shaped by a brutal childhood, who navigates the murderous politics of the English Reformation with a pragmatic ruthlessness that the novel renders as comprehensible if not sympathetic.

The formal innovation of the trilogy — Mantel uses the present tense and a distinctive third-person voice in which “he” almost always refers to Cromwell — creates an intimacy and immediacy entirely unusual in historical fiction. Bring Up the Bodies, which follows the fall of Anne Boleyn, is the trilogy’s most compressed and devastating volume: the same Cromwell who served Henry so effectively now engineers the destruction of a woman the king has tired of, and the gap between the political necessity and the human cost is rendered with ice-cold clarity.

Mantel’s prose requires full attention — the present-tense narration and the “he said/he did” construction can initially disorient readers accustomed to conventional historical fiction — and the world she depicts demands at least a passing familiarity with Tudor history. But for readers willing to meet the novels on their own terms, the Wolf Hall trilogy represents a summit of the historical fiction form: intelligent, morally serious, and unmistakably the work of a great novelist.

3 Books Reviewed

Bring Up the Bodies book cover

Bring Up the Bodies

by Hilary Mantel

4.4

Thomas Cromwell orchestrates the fall of Anne Boleyn so that Henry VIII can pursue Jane Seymour — a second act of court destruction more morally troubling than the first. Winner of the Man Booker Prize.

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The Mirror and the Light book cover
Editor's Pick

The Mirror and the Light

by Hilary Mantel

4.4

In the final volume of the Wolf Hall trilogy, Thomas Cromwell reaches the peak of his power as Henry VIII's chief minister — and begins the long fall that history has already pronounced inevitable. Mantel renders his last years with the same unflinching interiority that made the first two volumes masterpieces.

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Wolf Hall book cover
BestsellerEditor's Pick

Wolf Hall

by Hilary Mantel

4.3

Thomas Cromwell rises from a blacksmith's son to become Henry VIII's chief minister, navigating court intrigue, the fall of Cardinal Wolsey, and the king's desire for Anne Boleyn. Winner of the Man Booker Prize.

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Reading Guides & Lists

Frequently Asked Questions

What order should I read the Wolf Hall trilogy?

Read in order: Wolf Hall (2009), Bring Up the Bodies (2012), The Mirror & the Light (2020). The trilogy is a continuous narrative following Thomas Cromwell at the court of Henry VIII. Each volume picks up where the previous left off.

Do I need to know Tudor history to read Wolf Hall?

No prior knowledge is required. Mantel provides all necessary context within the narrative. The experience of reading Wolf Hall cold, discovering events as Cromwell does, is arguably better than approaching it with detailed prior knowledge.

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