* 3.5 stars
A secret love affair that Princess Victoria embarked upon with a Scottish nobleman over ten years her senior, is the astonishing subject of Roland Perry’s work of non fiction, The Queen, Her Lover and the Most Notorious Spy in History. There are further shocking revelations about Queen Victoria in Perry’s book, which details Victoria’s life as a young girl right through to her death and following her succession. The book certainly shattered my long held impression of Queen Victoria. Much is made of the Queen’s sexual appetite, which Prince Albert clearly found difficulty satisfying. Perry’s book also exposes a secret liaison between a widowed Queen Victoria and her young Indian servant, Abdul Karim. It is revealed that Queen Victoria embarked upon this affair after the death of another more well published romance she had with her Scottish bodyguard, John Brown. The spy element of this book is centered on the retrieval of a cache of letters which Queen Victoria wrote to her eldest daughter Vicky, soon after she moved to Germany, following her marriage to the German Emperor. These incredibly personal letters between Mother and Daughter, go into detail about Victoria’s ‘first love’ with the 13th Lord Elphinstone, when she was just fifteen years old. The content of these letters were so precious that for generations the British Royal family sought to keep them heavily under wraps. Eventually, a trusted KGB agent, whom the author Perry researched for another book, safely retrieved all the letters. It is thought had the letters and also other correspondence collected by the same KGB officer involving Edward VIII links to the Nazi’s had of surfaced much earlier, they possibly could of had the power the cause the downfall of the British monarchy.
Perry explains this book is a work of dramatised non fiction. It is thoroughly researched and written in such a way that it makes a part of British history very accessible to the reader. I did feel there was a slight gap in the sources used to back up all of these very interesting claims. Overall, a great read and one which will appeal to royalists.