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The Last Princess: The Devoted Life Of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter (2008)

The Last Princess: The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter (2008)

Book Info

Rating
3.75 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0312376987 (ISBN13: 9780312376987)
Language
English
Publisher
st. martin's press

About book The Last Princess: The Devoted Life Of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter (2008)

I'm in two minds about this book. It did give me some interesting information to flesh out my rather shaky image of Princess Beatrice and made me understand why she edited her mother's journals - something that had previously made me vilify her somewhat - and completed my increased research into Queen Victoria's children.However, I got the impression that Dennison didn't really like his subject. While he told us of Beatrice being a wonderfully talented pianist and translator, he always very quickly races back to the point that she couldn't express her full talent because of her mother. I'm pretty certain that he has a vendetta against Queen Victoria as well from the way that she is portrayed as all but Evil with a capital E. However, there were other sides to her character, which were admittedly diminished where bringing up and corresponding with her children were concerned, that are sadly neglected here. This book does prompt me to inadvertently add a slightly patronising 'poor' to Beatrice's name, like many a Wales sister, but Beatrice was certainly never always like that. Take her behaviour as a child for instance, and her stubbornness to marry. After reading more about her, I've gained a more unbiased view of Beatrice's life, but this book was certainly a good start.

Enjoyed The Last Princess very much. Here is the youngest child of Queen Victoria. That was so long ago. Yet she died shortly before I was born. So she's like of my time, too. She doesn't remember her dad, the beloved Prince Albert. She is her mother's little charmer in this world of her mother's emptiness. And when her older sibblings grow up, marry, and go away, young Beatrice is her mother's all purpose everything. The youngest daughters weren't supposed to marry. They were supposed to stay home and care for their aging parents whether they were queens or not. And Beatrice did. And Mother Victoria insured it to be so by undermining her daughter's confidence which was already low, and not allowing her to socialize with eligible men.But Beatrice did marry, late for the times, and had 4 children, and her husband died of malaria in his late 30s. Beatrice had never left her mother's side during this time. That was a condition of her marriage. And for the rest of her life, until her 1940 death, 30 years after her mother died, Beatrice edited her journals and correspondence and condinued to live her mother's life.This might not be a book for those who have not read Queen Victoria's bio or the bios of her children. But it's a fabulous companion piece to those books.

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This is going to sound sexist--and perhaps it is. But long experience of reading biographies and history and even fiction has brought me to the conclusion that while women can get inside mens' heads, it's the rare male writer who can really bring female characters to life.While Matthew Dennison can write well enough for a historian, and certainly he's done his research, Beatrice never springs to life here. He wants us to believe that she wasn't the dull little stay at home daughter in Queen Victoria's shadow, but his writing does nothing to change that image. She remains a two dimensional character.Perhaps this is because there is a dearth of materials on Beatrice. But what then was Dennison trying to do here?And yes, his way of abruptly announcing a major event and then going back and recounting what led to the event and doing so repeatedly is dreadfully annoying. And it's pretty poor storytelling....
—The Library Lady

This doesn't really count as "read", because I had to return it to the library unfinished. The style was beginning to irk me: the author had a tendency to assume that the reader knew the basic life story of Princess Beatrice, and that he was just adding to a basic knowledge. This lead to - for example - the chapter on her husband's death beginning with an anecdote that occurred two years after his death, which depended on the reader knowing the cause of death for it to make sense. I had assumed illness - later in the chapter, it seemed that he'd been killed on an expedition against the Ashanti in Africa. In about the last three paragraphs of the chapter, the author finally revealed that the cause of death was illness: Malaria contracted while on the Ashanti "expedition". But it was all written as though one of course knew all this.That said, it was unfortunate that I had to return it unfinished. I have a feeling that the most interesting period of Beatrice's life was yet to come.
—Heidi

I really didn't care for this book. It looks at the life of Queen Victoria's youngest child, Princess Beatrice and her "servitude" to her mother after the death of the Prince Consort. That "servitude" began when the child was four years old and continued throughout her mother's lifetime. There is so much repetition in the narrative that it had me skipping pages. It went on and on about the Queen's complete domination of her favorite daughter that I began to dislike both the Queen and Princess Beatrice. I am probably the minority opinion on this book but frankly, it bored me.
—Jill Hutchinson

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