The story that created a sensation in the 1930s is superbly told through the letters plus extracts from the pair's later memoirs, the then Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII, and the American society lady and later divorcee, Wallis Warfield Simpson, whose love affair cost the latter his throne in 1937.
Michael Bloch tells the story sympathetically and where necessary he fills in historical background or important relevant events in between the correspondence as well as an introductory background of Wallis' life prior to coming into contact with the then Prince of Wales. And it is her Aunt Bessie in America, with whom she corresponds copiously during the period under review, who is the first recipient of one of her letters. That letter begins on 8 January 1931 which is two days before Wallis is to meet HRH, which she fatefully did on 10 January at Burrough Court, Lady Furness's country house at Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire.
Fortunately Wallis suspended the letter after the eighth and continued it on 13 January when HRH merits only a brief mention as being one of the party that met there. However, in her much later memoirs (and with the benefit of hindsight) Wallis mentions she found David (as HRH was known) 'surprisingly small' but stated 'how enchanting she found his utter naturalness and his joie de vivre'. She did also mention how she and husband Ernest Simpson felt 'thoroughly out of place as the strangers among a large aristocratic company'. And that was the seemingly innocuous first meeting between the pair; much was to develop thereafter!
Occasional meetings at different venues occurred, so much so that as time passed she and Ernest became members of David's inner circle. And it is noticeable from the letters to Aunt Bessie that rather than feel out of place Wallis eventually thoroughly enjoyed the connection, although to be fair there is initially no mention of any attraction. But as the relationship grew David began to go our of his way to see more of Wallis and this in spite of Ernest being around some of the time (he was away on business quite often). And Ernest at first delighted in his wife being a close friend of David as it opened doors for the two of them to receive many invites to house parties and the like.
Slowly but surely Wallis is waxing lyrical about the Prince to Aunt Bessie and then when he begins to send her personal notes, in fairness without making any suggestions, the friendship began to blossom. And as is well known, it certainly did and the letters and billets-doux became more tender until it was obvious that there was a full-blown love affair developing.
To make matters somewhat easier for Wallis in this friendship, Ernest began a series of affairs culminating in one serious one that finally put the cat among the pigeons. By then Wallis and the Prince had developed their own language to express their feelings and David began to tell her how marriage was the only way he would feel fulfilled.
In fairness to Wallis she realised that this would cause consternation around the country and particularly with Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, his ministers and other Commonwealth heads of state. So, despite it being upsetting to her and not really what she wanted, she tried her hardest to persuade David, who by that time had become Edward VIII that the best way forward to prevent an almighty showdown was for her to disappear so that he could carry on as King.
But Edward (who we should now call him) would have none of it and the outcome was the abdication and their residence in Paris, once Wallis' divorce had gone through and they could meet again.
Excellently told, 'Wallis and Edward' captures a pivotal time, told mainly by the participants themselves, in the history of the British Royal family.