This book was recommended to me by a man who overheard me talking to my dad about audiobooks while visiting my mom in the hospital a few years ago and I finally got around to it. Marie Antoinette has a reputation for being shallow, callous, not too bright, and given to spend large amounts of the public's money on extravagant and frivolous things while the common people starved. Of course, it turns out she was more complicated than that. This book doesn't break new ground for those already familiar with her, but it is a good introduction, written in an easy-to-understand style and narrated by the great Davina Porter.
Raised in Vienna, Marie Antoinette was the youngest daughter of Emperor Francis I and Empress Maria Theresa. As a child, she wasn't very good at reading and writing, but did better at art and music. At 14, she was married to 15-year-old Louis of France for political reasons. Louis wasn't particularly interested in marriage, didn't know what to do, and might have had some physical issues. It took 7 years, but eventually the marriage was consummated, and children produced.
Marie had been raised as royalty - she knew how to handle herself around Kings, Queens, and courtiers and loved fashion, balls, and such but the intrigue at Versailles was at another level and Louis was out of his depth as King.
The French government was heavily in debt, the harvest had been bad, and people were starving. The common people were ready to revolt. The high-living foreign born Queen was an easy target for those wanting a scapegoat for the economic problems. Marie wasn't unsympathetic to suffering and never said "Let them eat cake", but she didn't have the skills or the luck needed to save herself and her family.
In the end, I see her as a tragic figure. She wanted nothing more than to be a good wife and mother, be loved by her subjects, and enjoy beautiful things. Instead, only one of her four children lived to adulthood, the French people blamed her for their poverty, her husband was sentenced to death by bloodthirsty revolutionaries, and she followed him a few months later. She was never going to be Catherine the Great, but in a different time and place, she could have been Jackie Kennedy or Princess Diana. She deserves to be remembered as a person and not just as an evil caricature.