Let's discuss films and TV programmes about the Stuarts too!
Starting with books, here are some I've read, with my opinion on them:
Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses who stole their father's crown: This is a book about Mary II, Anne and the Glorious Revolution by Maureen Waller. It's an OK book. However, Waller's habit of not even modernising the language and spelling the the letters is very irritating, and makes them hard to read. Some good character points are brought up, but a bit too much time is spent on James II, IMO.
The Stuart Princesses, by Alison Plowden. This details the lives of the Winter Queen, Mary, Princess Royal, Princess Elizabeth, Princess Minette, Mary II and Queen Anne. It is a wonderful book, I think - easy to read and superbly detailed.
Mary, Queen of Scotland and the Isles, by Margaret George. This is an historical novel. Though not as good as the Henry VIII one by the same author, it is well worth a read, though occassionally too graphic, in fact needlessly so, IMO.
Elizabeth and Mary: Cousins, Rivals, Queens, by Jane Dunn. I'm sure some people will disagree with me on this, but I found this book dull, directionless and hard to read.
Charles I's Children. I can't remember who wrote it, but it was a good little book.
That's my tuppence about books. I wonder, if anyone has read the following, could they please tell me what they thought of them?
Charles II, by Antonia Fraser.
William and Mary, by John van der Kiste.
Henrietta Maria, Charles I's Indomitable Queen, by Alison Plowden.
As for TV programmes . . .
Charles II: the Power and the Passion. A BBC drama fairly recently, I LOVE this. I saw it on TV and bought it on DVD as soon as I could. Wonderful costumes, wonderful actors, wonderful scenes. I highly reccommend it.
Gunpowder, Treason and Plot. 2004 drama. This centred around two episodes - one about Mary, Queen of Scots, and the other about her son James and the Gunpowder Plot. It was . . . Ok, IMO. Clemence Posey, who played Mary, was good. But she was a blond! At least they had Mary speak with a French accent, which was good. Robert Carlyle was OK as James, but seemed a little too . . . physchotic, which was odd.
Please post thoughts and opinions!