ROYALS—WATCHING AND READING
I read so much about the Netflix series, The Crown, while I was in London, I couldn’t wait to start watching it once I returned home. And now, I’m enthralled! It is so well done, elaborate, lavish even, and the family dynamics (exiled Duke of Windsor, Prince Philip’s role in their marriage once she’s queen) and back stories are fascinating. Claire Foy as Elizabeth is mesmerizing too.
I also just read Victoria by Daisy Goodwin. It was for sale in the UK in paperback and just was published here in the U.S. I believe that Goodwin wrote the script for the upcoming “Masterpiece” TV series before she wrote the novel. In any case, the two are linked. The novel is about Victoria’s first years as queen. She was only 18 when she ascended to the throne and had been protected and managed by her mother, her mother’s special friend, John Conroy, and her uncle, the Duke of Cumberland. They were all seeking power and influence over her. Victoria, if this account is to be believed and questions have been raised, became reliant on, and perhaps even developed a tendresse for her prime minister, Lord Melbourne. Whether all true or not, it’s an absorbing and enjoyable read. And one realize politics always exists whether in the foreground or background!
OTHER RECENT READING
The Past by Tessa Hadley
This novel has been much touted. Initially I wasn’t sure I liked it. The writing was lovely, full of imagery related to the English countryside, but there didn’t seem to be much of a focus. And I wasn’t fond of Alice, the first of the four siblings to be introduced. She seemed too diffuse and scatterbrained. She and her sisters, Harriet, the eldest who never married, and Fran, mother of two young children, plus their brother Roland are to spend three weeks at a summer cottage that belonged to their grandparents. They are gathering partly to decide whether or not to sell the cottage.
Roland arrives last with his third wife, the Argentinian Pilar, who is different and definitely an outsider. The other sisters both want and don’t want to like her and her very difference gives her status. Roland brings his 16-year old daughter Molly, and Alice has included Kasim, the son of her former boyfriend, who is in his early 20’s.
It’s a novel of shifting relationships, more than action, full of undercurrents and nuanced encounters. These now middle-aged adults engage and assess and disagree with one another all the while observing or not the attraction between Molly and Kasim. And ignoring to some extent what the children, Arthur and Ivey, are hatching. In three sections, the first and last are the present and the middle section is The Past. It focuses on Jill, the adult siblings’ mother, long since deceased, and is to me that which links everything together. I liked this section best and it made it possible for me to re-appreciate the first part and to really enjoy what Hadley does in the closing section.
Orchestrated Death by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
I have been working my way through Harrod-Eagles’ Morland Dynasty series, but have just discovered her police detective series. Where the Morland series is measured, detail-laden prose steeped in English history from the 12th century on (there are 30+ volumes), this first Bill Slider mystery is contemporary, fun, and romantic, all at the same time. Middle-aged Slider is on the cusp of burnout when he is assigned the case of the murder of young violinist Anne-Marie Austen. Her death haunts him personally more than most cases although he soon discovers that she was unlikable and had few friends.
Slider is well-drawn and appealing while his partner and friend Atherton, O’Flaherty, the desk sergeant, and Joanna, Anne-Marie’s colleague and Slider’s love interest, are also well fleshed out characters. Harrod-Eagles here writes with a verve and feeling which outshines her other series. I’m looking forward to Bill Slider’s future adventures.
Note: Queen Victoria photo–www.yareah.com
We were just talking about watching The Crown- now we will!
Lovely photo at your header and pretty colored pencil picture at your footer!