Victoria: An Intimate Biography

by Stanley Weintraub

Hardcover, 1987

Status

Available

Publication

Dutton Adult (1987), Edition: 1st, 700 pages

Description

This biography of Victoria highlights the many dramas of her life. For example, she was fatherless at eight months and treated poorly by her family, but survived to become the only English queen comparable to Elizabeth I. The character of Victoria herself, stubborn and vital, is also drawn out.

Rating

½ (20 ratings; 3.6)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Schmerguls
This 1987 biography of Queen Victoria was read even though I read the very excellent biography of her by Elizabeth Longford and emembered it well--but that was reas clear back on 18 Aug 1966, and I also remebered well how mcuh I enjoyed Stanly Weintraub's excellent A Stillness heard Round the
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WEorld (read 24 Nov 1985) and his The London Yankees (read 29 apr 1994 and his Long Day's Journey Into War (read 23 Nov 2001). This book on Victoria did not disappoint. It does an excellent job detailing the amazing life of the queen from the time of her accession in 1837 to the day she died on 22 Jan 1901, covering all the events in Britain during that almost 63 year span. One can of course become annoyed at some of Victoria's idiosyncrasies (she wanted reports to her handwritten even after typewriters were available, and often insisted that plays be put on for her rather she going to the theater, and insisting that some 100 people accompany her when she went in the spring to the Riviera). But some of these idiosyncrasies actually led to a more democratic Britain, especially the years when she was a recluse after her husband died, sine the power of the monarch declined. I found the book a joy to read, even though some of the events were well-known and remembered by me from other reading I have done.
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LibraryThing member AnneliM
First biography by an American. Very readable

Language

Physical description

20 inches

ISBN

0525244697 / 9780525244691
Page: 0.3785 seconds