Laurie Graham’s dry wit and colourful characterisation of the British Royal family into which Princess Victoria Melita was born is so compelling - and please excuse the cliche - I couldn’t put it down.
Known by her large family and her 'Grandma Queen Victoria', as ‘Ducky’, Victoria sees her royal family as if she’s examining them through a looking glass. She loves them all but at the same time is pragmatic and accepting of all their faults, pride and questionable behaviour, but that doesn’t mean she doesn’t feel deep emotion, she simply has a very stoic English way of dealing with it.
Her Mother, the Duchess of Edinburgh, a Romanov daughter of the Tsar who saw herself as grander than Queen Victoria, ‘who was after all only the daughter of a duke!’ Ducky recounts her hilarious attempts to upstage the British monarch in throwaway tone and a mental shrug of her shoulders..
Then there are Ducky’s cousins, one of which was Empress Alix of Russia, who was known as ‘Sunny’ Ducky tells us she finds this strange when she never smiled. This sent me looking through old Victorian photographs online and she was right – Empress Alix never did! [Maybe she had prior knowledge of what would happen to her?]
Ducky’s account shows the family of Queen Victoria as individuals with their own problems, prejudices, infidelities, confused paternity and bad judgements. It’s a fabulous story and where we all imagine life must have been an easy dream for royalty, this book shows that nothing is quite as it seems and in our own way we are all teetering on the edge of the abyss. A fascinating and beautifully written story and one which deserves space on a shelf in anyone's library, especially mine!
I received a free copy of this novel from Quercus Books in exchange for an honest review