
Victoria
A Life
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Misunderstood as an ineffective and moody monarch with little confidence, Queen Victoria is now being revealed as a genuine powerhouse. A.N. Wilson adds to the new insights on Victoria's wondrous life, reinstating her as a ruler more powerful, self-assured, and ahead of her time than previously documented. British narrator Clive Chafer unfolds the story of Victoria's lonely childhood and apprenticeship as a ruler. Later, she learns to fend off the interference of untrustworthy advisors and enjoys a devoted marriage to Prince Albert. After his death, newfound strength transforms her into a cunning imperialist who makes her nation into the dominant global power of the time. Chafer's narration elegantly captures Victoria's 64-year reign as well as her personal triumphs and struggles. This is storytelling fit for a queen. B.J.P. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine

August 25, 2014
Wilson (The Elizabethans) chronicles the life of Victoria, England’s longest-reigning monarch, in all its personal and political complexities. The product of a race to produce an heir after the premature death of Princess Charlotte, the future King George IV’s only heir, in 1817, Victoria grows up caught between her German mother’s influence and that of the British royal family. Ascending the throne at 18 and “at the mercy of the major political interest groups,” her wedding to Prince Albert follows, with their progeny marrying into positions of conflicting interest across Europe. Wilson exhibits a knack for description, his subject in turns “instinctively indiscreet,” “an impenitent imperialist,” and most notably, “a difficult woman to like, but an easy woman to love”—Victoria referred to her eldest daughter’s pregnancy as “horrid news,” and told her son upon his sister’s death, “The good are always taken and the bad remain.” Wilson captures the quirks of Victoria’s various prime ministers and the “drunken, loud-mouthed Highlander” John Brown, the queen’s “constant companion” and object of endless scandalous conjecture. Victorian era politics receive meticulous attention bordering on tedium, including suffrage for a growing middle class; increasing public questions about the utility of monarchy; and the trials of colonialism in India, Ireland, and South Africa. More than a Victoria biography, Wilson skillfully weaves the vast narrative of the Victorian landscape, despite being laden with bureaucratic minutiae.
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