An interesting autobiography of an upper class woman who married the Rajah (king) of Sarawak, Borneo to become the queen.
This book has many elements that make it a unique read. I have read two other books on this rule including Three White Rajahs so it was good to get a behind-the-scenes insight into the inner workings of the rule.
The Rajah was painted as a generous, selfless leader which left alone sounds amazing. However Lady Brooke reveals some humanising qualities about him such as his shyness, compartmentalisation and most of all his womanising! It seems as though barely one women did not fall into his charms. Lady B was remarkable and ahead of her time in terms of her rationalisation of this situation. She thought of their marriage as a loving friendship and was apparently not bothered or threatened by his revolving door of young women that he used to flaunt in her face. She didn’t say in as many words but may have implied that she racked up a few numbers of her own. Even still, this was not the main reason why the book was so original.
We heard about the rise to power, the policies, culture, interaction with the people, some poor decisions and much more.
The book was about herself as much as it was about her husband. She was very accomplished and wrote many books. Her constant name dropping of famous people she knew grew annoying very quickly but she balanced that out with alot of self criticism.
The second half of the book is far more interesting so stick with it.
I would recommend this to anyone who likes history, Borneo or about women who succeed despite trying circumstances.