This book was disappointing. I'm a huge Diana fan and always very interested in royal history through the ages, so this book intrigued me when I saw it at the library. What if Diana hadn't died in the tunnel, but faked her death a few months later so she could escape her life? That's the question this book asks. Aside from the fact that I don't think Diana would leave her sons no matter how bad things got (and from what I understand from reading reputable biographies of her, her life was actually on an upswing when she died), I was willing to suspend my disbelief for the book. My problem with the book was where the author chose to take this idea. The story revolves around a paparazzo who stumbles upon Diana in her new life and wants to out her. The Diana character ("Lydia" in her new life) realizes he is on to her and it turns into a question of how will she (or can she) remain undiscovered by the world at large. I guess that premise is fine. I mean, after the novelty of who is she now, what is her life like, a possibility of discovery is the next logical step, I suppose. However, the way this guy found her was so ridiculously impossible. He was a British photographer in the States working on a book for the 10th anniversary of Diana's death when he happened to look at a map and see that there was a town called Kensington in the general part of the country he happened to be in, so he decided to go there to work on his book. And, guess what? That's where Diana was living incognito! (Because Kensington, of course, was the palace she lived in.) And, of course he happens to bump into her and take a pic of her because he thought she was hot and in spite of her long dark hair, pumped up lips, and new nose, he's able to recognize her eyes and from there? It's on! As if. The worst part is that the author set up a perfectly plausible way for someone to discover Diana, but just left it twisting in the wind. There was a third character, Lawrence, who was Diana's former private secretary. He is the one who helped her fake her death amd start her new life. This guy was dying and wsa keeping a private journal all about her new life and how they went through the process of faking her death, the plastic surgery, her new life in the States, etc. Lawrence also had a brain tumor. So, all the author had to do was make it happen that Lawrence dies before he can destroy the journal (as he kept saying he needed to do), someone discovers it, hands it over to a journalist who was very familiar with Diana from covering her in the past, and voila! Much more plausible. Not sure why the author set up this whole scenario and then never used it. Anyway, aside from all of this, there were a lot of totally flat characters -- all of Lydia's new friends, whom I couldn't tell apart at all, just a bunch of generic soccer moms; a boyfriend who was just a prop; the sleazy photographer and Diana herself who really never even came to life (is that a pun? I'm not sure.) All in all, not a book I recommend.