Sally Bedell Smith is an American journalist-turned-royal biographer. I believe she has written some UNauthorized biographies of the current royal family, but this books seems to have been authorized, as Smith was given great access to the archives at Windsor Castle as well as letters of friends of Bertie - the second son of George V and Queen Mary - and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, who went on to become King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.
As the second son, Bertie was never prepared to be King. Much was made of his debilitating stutter, caused early in life by a strict tutor and his overbearing father. He began work with Lionel Logue YEARS before his coronation, unlike the depiction in the movie "The King's Speech." [Good movie, FYI] It was love-at-first-sight for Bertie when he met Elizabeth at one of the many dinner parties of the era amongst the aristocracy. She comes across as a flighty, really entitled aristocrat enjoying flirting w/ many suitors. She turned down Bertie's marriage proposals two times before taking 11 days to ponder her answer on the third time. It seems that she enjoyed her aristocratic lifesty too much to take on royal duties, but that is my personal opinion, not the author's. Fortunately, she rose to the life of a working royal after marrying Bertie in April, 1923.
George V died in 1935, causing Bertie's older brother David to become King Edward VIII. David was a lifelong playboy, currently deeply in love with the soon-to-be-twice-divorced Wallis Simpson. He loathed royal duties and was really unsuited to the stodgy duties of a King; in fact, he didn't do the work presented to him in his daily "red boxes," to the despair of the government. He also had definite pro-Nazi leanings. He and Wallis had gone to Germany and met many top Nazi officials, including Hitler himself.
However, the government would not abide Edward VIII marrying the divorcee, so Edward had to choose between his crown and his love. The book really humanized this dilemma for me. What would any one of us have done in the same situation? Edward's decision to abdicate for love caused a constitutional crisis at the time, and the issue of duty-versus-love has visited the next two generations of royals as well: Princess Margaret was NOT allowed to marry the divorcé she loved, but Prince Harry was. Hmmm.
Anyway, Bertie and Elizabeth were crowned King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in May, 1937, on what was supposed to be Edward's coronation day. They only had a couple of years to adjust to life in Buckingham Palace as King and Queen before the crisis of WWII began. They rose magnificently to this occasion as well. Their reputations soared because of their personal bravery: they refused to leave London and performed incessant touring of bombed areas of London, giving heart to the suffering citizens. I have always loved Elizabeth's quote of the time when asked why she didn't leave: "The children will not leave without me; I will not leave without the King, and the King will NEVER leave." The Brits are many things, but cowardly is not one of them. [I know whereof I speak: my mother-in-law was 100% Welsh and grew up at her grandparents' farm in Wales during the war years. Her older sister worked in an airplane factory, operating a lathe.]
George VI and Elizabeth celebrated the end of the War w/ the rest of the country, but they really weren't given long to enjoy their royal lives thereafter. George died from lung cancer in 1952, after a few years of declining health, thus causing his 25-year-old daughter to become Queen Elizabeth II. The monarchy had been saved.
5 stars for a biography filled with direct quotes from letters written at the time, making it more intimate and almost chatty than most biographies.