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Victoria: The Heart and Mind of a Young Queen

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The official companion to the Masterpiece presentation on PBS, Victoria delves into the private writings of the young Queen Victoria, painting a vivid picture of the personal life of one of England’s greatest monarchs.

From the producers of Poldark and Endeavour, ITV’s Victoria follows the early years of the young queen’s reign, based closely on Victoria’s own letters and journals. Now explore this extensive collection in greater depth, and discover who Victoria really was behind her upright public persona.

At only eighteen years old, Victoria ascended the throne as a rebellious teenager and gradually grew to become one of the most memorable, unshakeable and powerful women in history. The extensive writings she left behind document this personal journey and show how she triumphed over scandal and corruption. Written by author and Victoria historical consultant, Helen Rappaport, and including a foreword by Daisy Goodwin—acclaimed novelist and scriptwriter of the series—Victoria details the history behind the show. Revealing Victoria’s own thoughts about the love interests, family dramas and court scandals during her early reign, it also delves into the running of the royal household, the upstairs-downstairs relationships, and what it was like to live in Victorian England.

Full of beautiful photography from the series and genuine imagery from the era, Victoria takes you behind the palace doors and discover the girl behind the queen.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published October 6, 2016

183 people are currently reading
2194 people want to read

About the author

Helen Rappaport

28 books855 followers
Helen Rappaport is a historian specialising in the Victorian period, with a particular interest in Queen Victoria and the Jamaican healer and caregiver, Mary Seacole. She also has written extensively on late Imperial Russia, the 1917 Revolution and the Romanov family. Her love of all things Victorian springs from her childhood growing up near the River Medway where Charles Dickens lived and worked. Her passion for Russian came from a Russian Special Studies BA degree course at Leeds University. In 2017 she was awarded an honorary D.Litt by Leeds for her services to history. She is also a member of the Royal Historical Society, the Genealogical Society, the Society of Authors and the Victorian Society. She lives in the West Country, and has an enduring love of the English countryside and the Jurassic Coast, but her ancestral roots are in the Orkneys and Shetlands from where she is descended on her father's side. She likes to think she has Viking blood.

Helen is the author of 14 published books with 2 forthcoming in 2022:

"In Search of Mary Seacole: The Making of a Cultural Icon" - Simon & Schuster UK, 17 February 2022

"After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris through Revolution and War" - St Martin's Press USA, 8 March 2022

For her next project she is working on a biography of Juliane of Saxe-Coburg aka Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna of Russia

Follow her also on Facebook at:
HelenRappaportWriter

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 154 reviews
Profile Image for Negin.
779 reviews147 followers
September 10, 2017
I’ve always loved Queen Victoria and couldn’t resist this when I saw it in one of our favorite bookstores while visiting Miami a few months ago. If you’ve enjoyed the TV series, this is an absolutely beautiful companion.

Profile Image for Robin Hatcher.
Author 122 books3,262 followers
Read
February 2, 2021
Although called The Victoria Letters, the actual writings (letters and diaries and newspaper articles) are a very small percentage of the narrative. A dab here and there as they rushed through about four years in the life of the young queen, the same period covered by the series (which will air soon in the States). What was there was interesting, but not so much that this is an important "companion" to the TV series.

I have to mark down the audio version for two reasons: (1) The producers chose to interrupt the narration to announce any new narrator's name for a "character" we haven't met before. Very irritating and unnecessary. They could have added a note at the end with the list of narrators involved in the audiobook. Especially since often the introduction of the narrator took longer than the line they actually read. (2) I understand that the print book includes some wonderful photographs. The producers did not supply the photographs to listeners of the audiobook. (Other producers of audiobooks have provided photos via Audible in a PDF document.) I felt ripped off because of this.

I love history, and there was enough in this book for me to say I liked it.
Profile Image for Emma Rose.
1,363 reviews71 followers
February 7, 2017
This was really good. First of all it's lavishly illustrated and beautifully produced. I also thought the historical background was really well done - it's got the right amount of straight-up biography, quotes from the show and excerpts from Victoria's letters. The content was absolutely riveting. Really great, and I can see myself rereading this for years to come.
Profile Image for kay! ☾.
508 reviews168 followers
dnf
September 19, 2018
DNF @ 45%

There's nothing inherently wrong with this book. Especially if you happen to be a fan of the BBC show Victoria or just Queen Victoria herself. I'm not sure how historically accurate it is but I did find everything to be really interesting. The truth is I was into the book when I first started it but as the days went by I lost interest. Thus, DNF. Since I read almost 50% of it I won't give it a rating but it does seem around 3 1/2 to 4 starts, at least what I read.

I'll eventually come back to this book, maybe when I get back into the show or if I want to read about history but for right now I have to DNF.
Profile Image for Truusje Truffel.
63 reviews17 followers
August 2, 2019
Grootmoeder van Europa

Dit jaar is het tweehonderd jaar geleden dat Edward, hertog van Kent en zijn zwangere vrouw Victoria van Saksen-Coburg vanuit Amorbach, Beieren, aan een lange reis begonnen om hun eerste kind geboren te laten worden in Engeland. Op 24 mei 1819 zag Alexandrina Victoria van Hannover het levenslicht op Kensington Palace te Londen.

Veel, heel veel is er al geschreven over Queen Victoria, die tot vier jaar geleden nog de titel 'Langst regerende monarch' droeg. Al op achttienjarige leeftijd kreeg de eigenzinnige, opstandige en vaderloze Drina de kroon opgezet. Haar regeerperiode (1837-1901) heeft drieënzestig jaar, zeven maanden en twee dagen geduurd en is als het 'victoriaanse tijdperk' van het Verenigd Koninkrijk van Groot-Brittannië de geschiedenis ingegaan. Hoewel het fotograferen al in het begin van de negentiende eeuw al tot de mogelijkheden behoorde, zijn er geen foto's van haar gemaakt. Pas in 1858 zijn de eerste foto's van haar en haar grote gezin gemaakt. Honderdeenenveertig zelfgeschreven dagboeken getuigen van haar persoonlijke belevenissen en haar onverbloemde mening over gebeurtenissen en de mensen om haar heen.

De prachtige, kleurrijke serie over haar jonge jaren, waarvoor Daisy Goodwin het scenario heeft geschreven, zal menigeen aan de buis gekluisterd hebben en vanaf deze week worden de herhalingen weer uitgezonden. Een mooie gelegenheid om dit bijzonder mooi geïllustreerde boek in het zonnetje te zetten.

De ongehuwde koningin kreeg na het bestijgen van de kroon ineens te maken met de 'Reginamania'. Vanuit alle hoeken werden er geschikte huwelijkskandidaten gezocht en gestuurd die naar de hand van Victoria kwamen dingen. Haar oom Leopold echter had zijn zinnen gezet op een van de twee neven Coburg.

'Inmiddels was Albert, gelukkig, door de keuring gekomen; Victoria had alle toepasselijke en voor de hand liggende dweperige complimentjes in haar dagboek geschreven, waarvan ze wist dat het door haar moeder gelezen werd, maar als potentiële huwelijkskandidaat zag ze Albert als een eventuele mogelijkheid, meer niet. Zoals lord M. haar later adviseerde: 'De Coburgs zijn niet geliefd in het buitenland en neven zijn niet goed."

William Lamb, tweede burggraaf van Melbourne - die Victoria steevast lord M. noemde - was van grote invloed om de jonge koningin op te leiden en van ministerieel advies te voorzien. Ze hadden een hechte band en Victoria hechtte veel waarde aan de mening en wijze lessen van de inmiddels achtenvijftigjarige man.

'Ik prijs mezelf gelukkig dat ik zo'n man aan het hoofd van de regering mag hebben; een man aan wie ik alles veilig kan toevertrouwen.' [...] 'Mannen als hij vind je nog maar weinig in deze wereld vol bedrog!'

Op 10 februari 1840 trouwde ze met haar neef Albert van Saksen-Coburg-Gotha. Het was een zeer gelukkig huwelijk, waar negen kinderen uit voort zijn gekomen. De Duitse Albert werd door zijn huwelijk Brits staatsburger, maar een Britse adellijke titel werd hem niet gegund. Toch Victoria zich maar al te graag door haar steun en toeverlaat adviseren.

Zowel de serie als het boek bestrijken niet het gehele leven van de vorstin. De ondertitel zegt het immers al; 'de jonge koningin'.
Wat het boek zo fantastisch maakt zijn de talrijke afbeeldingen uit de serie, de dagboekfragmenten en de beschrijving van de vele personen waar ze mee te maken kreeg, zoals onder andere haar gouvernante barones Louise Lehzen, met wie ze een hechte vriendschap had. Aan wie ze een gruwelijke hekel had was Sir John, het hoofd van de huishouding en hij kwam er in haar dagboeken dan ook niet zo genadig van af. Alle personages komen aan bod en worden belicht.

Oude, originele portretten, documenten en beschrijvingen van het leven buiten Buckingham Palace larderen dit boek en achterin is een deel opgenomen van anekdotes over hoe het er achter de schermen bij de filmopname aan toeging.

Jenna Coleman, het hoofdpersonage Victoria: 'Het lastigste was om in die fantastische kostuums door de modder van Yorkshire te lopen. Meestal droeg ik rubber laarzen onder mijn koninginnenoutfit.'

Lees, kijk en geniet van het leven, handel en wandel van deze vorstin. Ze is heel menselijk neergezet, met de onvermijdelijke fouten die ze maakte, haar eigenzinnigheid, liefde en verdriet. Een schitterend hebbe-boek om vaak te pakken en te genieten van deze innemende en soms een ietsepietsie stijfkoppige jonge Queen, die de naam 'Grootmoeder van Europa' kreeg vanwege de onvermoeibare invloed die ze had om haar nakomelingen huwelijken aan te laten gaan waarbij bijna alle Europese vorstenhuizen met elkaar in verbinding kwam. Ze was grootmoeder van tweeënveertig kleinkinderen.
Het biedt een magnifieke aanvulling op de serie en heel veel waardevolle informatie.
Een aanrader!!!

Auteur

Helen F. Rappaport (1947), is een Britse auteur en voormalig actrice. Ze is gespecialiseerd in het Victoriaanse tijdperk en het revolutionaire Rusland.
Ze werd geboren als Helen Ware in Bromley, groeide op in de buurt van de rivier de Medway in Noord-Kent en ging naar Chatham Grammar School for Girls.

Ze studeerde Russisch aan de Universiteit van Leeds, waar ze betrokken was bij de universitaire theatergroep en begon haar acteercarrière.
Na acteren met de Leeds University Theatre Group verscheen ze in verschillende televisieseries waaronder Crown Court, Love Hurts en The Bill. Ze beweerde later dat ze '20 jaar in de doldrums had doorgebracht, platzak als een werkloze en ellendige actrice' ...

In de vroege jaren negentig werd ze een copy-editor voor academische uitgevers Blackwell en OUP. en heeft ook bijgedragen aan historische en biografische naslagwerken die zijn gepubliceerd door bijvoorbeeld Cassell en Readers Digest.

Ze werd een full-time schrijver in 1998, het schrijven van drie boeken voor de Amerikaanse uitgever ABC-CLIO waaronder een Encyclopaedia of Women Social Reformers in 2001, met een voorwoord van Marian Wright Edelman. Het won in 2002 een prijs van de American Library Association als een uitstekende referentiebron en volgens het Times Higher Education Supplement, 'Een prachtig boek, informatief en breed'.
(Bron: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_R...)

Titel: Victoria, de jonge koningin
Auteur: Helen Rappaport
Vertaling: Hilke Makkink
Pagina's: 304
ISBN: 9789492168299
Uitgeverij Karmijn
Verschenen: april 2019
Profile Image for Marina.
2,042 reviews359 followers
March 10, 2019
** Books 22 - 2019 **

This books to accomplish Tsundoku Books Challenge 2019

3,4 of 5 stars!


I always loved the story about British Monarchy and one of them is about Queen Victoria is. I watched movie Young Victoria, The Queen even the king's speech is one of my favorite movie LOL. I just know this books is based on the new TV series that i haven't watch it yet. So i will watch it after finish this pieces. *Fingercrossed ;p

The things that i like in this books is we just know the another side of Queen Victoria from her letters to people surrounding her. I just found some truth that in the beginning the Queen is falling in love with Prince ernest not Prince Albert.. She wants to get married using White wedding dress in that time some myths said it wasn't good one a virgin using white as wedding dress. Another fact is her throne's ascendion is far away cheaper than william IV, the previous king is. I also just know that Queen have mistress of robes, lady of bedchamber, maids of honor, etc and it was compulsory to them for mastering france, germany and latin language.

One of my favorite part is Helen Rappaport is the one who written this books and i really adore her writing in The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra :D

Thankyou Big Bad Wolf 2019!
Profile Image for Jane.
Author 11 books969 followers
March 26, 2017
I received a free copy of this book for a feature article I did for the Historical Novel Society (unfortunately behind the members-only paywall). It's a tie-in for the Victoria TV series, and much room is taken up by full-page stills from the series, so obviously it's aimed at the fans.

BUT fortunately, the author is Helen Rappaport so there's tons of fascinating information about the real-life characters (including portraits so you can see their real faces which, of course, are not nearly as glamorous as the actors'). The material is beautifully arranged, with multiple excerpts from Queen Victoria's diary (the image of the teenage virgin queen admiring Albert in skintight white cashmere britches with nothing on underneath is definitely going to stick in my mind). This is history as entertainment, definitely, but ultimately not a fluff piece because there's real historical expertise behind it. Nicely presented, too--the photos in my (pre-release) copy were a bit on the dark side but I thought the design was excellent and the overall effect appropriately sumptuous. Worth a look unless the idea of actors with gorgeous cheekbones playing dumpy weak-chinned aristos really annoys you.
Profile Image for JannieTr.
123 reviews12 followers
August 13, 2019
Om met het uiterlijk te beginnen: het boek is fraai uitgevoerd. Zeer rijk geïllustreerd, bijna geen bladzijde zonder foto's. Uit de tv-serie of kopieën van (vertaalde) fragmenten uit handgeschreven brieven en dagboeken, originele afbeeldingen van jurken, schilderijen en dergelijke. Alles is gedrukt op stevig, mat papier waarop de kleurenfoto's goed tot hun recht komen. Ruim 300 bladzijden bevat het boek en door de luxe uitvoering is het behoorlijk zwaar.
Maar dan de inhoud, want daar gaat het toch eigenlijk om. Net als in de tv-serie wordt het verhaal van de jonge Victoria chronologisch verteld. Hier en daar lezen we een kanttekening bij wat er in het script gesuggereerd wordt. Maar bijna nergens botsen die twee. Wel blijken twee figuren een iets andere rol gekregen te hebben om het verhaal een extra romantisch tintje te geven. Het doet aan het levensverhaal van Victoria en Albert niets af en het is leuk om te lezen hoe het in werkelijkheid zat met met deze belangrijke bijfiguren.
Daarnaast gaf deze literaire vrijheid de mogelijkheid om in de tv-serie iets te laten zien van hoe het leven van de gewone man en vrouw er in die periode in Londen uitzag. In het boek lezen we daar nog meer over. En over vele andere zaken, die soms maar even werden aan gestipt in de serie. Zoals bijvoorbeeld het verhaal achter de trouwjurk, waarvan een foto uit de serie staat naast een oude tekening van de echte. Over de stoffen die allemaal uit Groot-Brittannië moesten komen, waaronder het Honitonkant. Hoe de maker ervan daardoor van een faillissement werd gered en dat de maakster van de jurk zelf de patronen vernietigde om te voorkomen dat de jurk nagemaakt kon worden.
Voorin staat een uitgebreide stamboom en van de figuren die een belangrijke rol speelden in het leven van Victoria krijgen we in de loop van het boek ook allemaal een beter beeld. Zelfs over de belangrijkste acteurs lezen we het een en ander.

Ik vind het van veel lef getuigen dat een kleine uitgeverij als Karmijn dit prachtige boek heeft uitgegeven. Ik hoop van harte dat het een verkoopsucces zal worden. Het boek is het meer dan waard om onder de aandacht gebracht te worden. Het is een fantastisch cadeau, zowel voor iemand die de tv-serie heeft gezien, als voor mensen die geïnteresseerd zijn in biografieën of historische romans. Voor die laatsten zal vast gelden, dat ze alsnog de serie willen zien, nadat ze het boek hebben gelezen en bekeken.
Eind augustus 2019 begint het derde deel van de serie. Het vervolg op dit boek, dus...
Hele recensie lezen? Zie: https://mijnboekenkast.blogspot.com/2...
Profile Image for Brie.
338 reviews17 followers
April 13, 2017
If you like the Victoria series on PBS, pick up this book. It should help tide you over until season 2 comes out. :)

I loved reading more about the real Victoria. This book includes many excerpts from her actual letters and diary entries. The photos from the show are fabulous as well. This book is definitely aimed at fans of the show, but you will learn a little bit about the beginning of the Victoria era as well.
Profile Image for Amy.
786 reviews51 followers
February 14, 2017
this likely is only something that the most avid PBS/Queen Victoria/British monarchy fan would actually buy/own.

Currently the Masterpiece series Victoria airs on PBS and Victoria historical consultant Helen Rappaport wrote this companion book. The book includes a forward by novelist and series screenwriter Daisy Goodwin, who writes: “There were plenty of people who thought that an 18-year-old girl could not be an effective monarch. But it is clear when you read Victoria’s own words that she was a woman with an extraordinary sense of her own identity.”

The author delves into the queen’s writings to provide scholarly insight. Throughout the book there are quotes from Queen Victoria’s diaries as well as letters from the Queen, her family, confidants and Prince Albert. There’s a useful House of Hanover Family Tree [1714-1837] and plenty of beautiful pictures of the Victoria cast throughout the book. It includes these sections: Little Drina; From Kensington Palace to Buckingham Palace; The Maiden Queen; Lord M; The German Pauper; Her Majesty’s Household; The Court of Queen Victoria; The Welfare of My People; Becoming a Mother; Behind the Scenes.

When I watch historical television series I often find myself googling information on people and events. This book contains a bevy of information and details which may enhance one’s enjoyment of the program. It serves as a magnificent resource—all in one attractive coffee table book-- for fans of the program as well as the monarchy and Victorian era.

published in full here: https://entertainmentrealm.com/2017/0...
Profile Image for Rachael Marsceau.
597 reviews55 followers
July 12, 2018
Once again, beautiful formatting with rich, glossy pictures. Incredibly educational but easy to read in small sections. Some info was repeated in the next book, and I found the font they chose for her journal entries to be rather difficult to read, but still loved this.
Profile Image for Mary-Faith.
355 reviews110 followers
April 23, 2018
3.5 / 5 stars

I love Queen Victoria, the Victorian Era, and the Victoria series, so I was so excited to pick this up. Unfortunately, it didn't quite live up to my expectations. There were parts that felt a bit dry and seemed to just be listing facts in each sentence. Obviously this is more of a "coffee table book" and won't have the same narrative qualities as a regular book, but still.

The photographs from the series were absolutely stunning, though. Reading Queen Victoria's own words through journal entries and letters was so cool. I loved learning more about her and being able to separate fact from fiction in how she has been portrayed on the screen. I particularly enjoyed the "Behind the Scenes" chapter with information on how the series is filmed. I totally don't think about how hard it must be, but we are obviously not living in the 1800s and they can't exactly go film on-location at Buckingham Palace. It definitely gave me new appreciation for what goes into the show.

So, no, this wasn't my favorite, but it was interesting. If you enjoy the TV show, I would recommend it. Now I feel like I want to read a bunch of books about Queen Victoria. :)
Profile Image for Cheryl.
Author 17 books83 followers
July 16, 2017
Loved this book almost as much as the series on Masterpiece. I bought the book at Blenheim Palace when my husband and I visited England this past May. We also visited Kensington Palace, which is where Queen Victoria grew up. Unfortunately while there, they had the Victoria exhibit closed so we didn't get to see that part. But reading this book after seeing the Palace helped me picture her living there. I want to watch season one again, and can't wait for season two. Hopefully there will be a book to accompany that, as well.
Profile Image for Helen Barnes.
16 reviews
November 22, 2017
I gave this a high rating because it was just so enjoyable. It's more what would call a 'coffee table book' - to be left out for all to look at, picked up and read when you fancy it. It's got all that kind of gloss, but has the handwritten text from Victoria's diaries which I love reading, as well as the narrative about her young life. I did read the second half of it more like reading a novel because I just wanted to continue seeing what other gems Victoria had written (and others)
Profile Image for Kim.
2,738 reviews14 followers
February 28, 2020
Really enjoyed this as a good historical background to the TV series I thoroughly enjoyed - plenty of colour pictures from the series linked to the real history. Just thought that the title 'The Victoria Letters' was a bit misleading as extracts from her letters probably only comprise about 5% of the book. Still a most enjoyable and informative read but not one that I intend to keep on my shelves having read it - 8/10.
Profile Image for Ann.
212 reviews
December 26, 2022
History put into bite-size bits that was a great deal more fun to read that I would have expected. It was a gift, so I started flipping through it, impressed by all the photos from history and the tv series. I like how it was organized and I like how it was very readable. I'll keep it for a reference book on the era, as the detail is that good.
565 reviews80 followers
April 24, 2017
A beautiful book, with copies of letters and diary entries from Queen Victoria's and Albert's personal writings, also paintings of the historical figures next to the contemporaries who are playing them in the TV series. Beautiful photos and background info on the set design. A lovely companion to the TV series and to have illustrations while reading other books on Queen Victoria.
Profile Image for Elin Eriksen.
Author 24 books159 followers
August 16, 2019
Biography of Queen Victoria

Biography of the early reign of Queen Victoria and the thoughts/behind the scene workings, of the TV-serie Victoria.

Loved the pictures from the TV-serie, paintings, sketches and the excerpts from Queen Victoria's diaries.
Delved into the politics of the era, especially the conditions of the poor but also the industrial revolution were canvassed.
Described the inner workings of the court and the mistakes that she made.

I would have loved to have read more about her relationship with Albert but the snippets that were there, were delightful.

Heartily recommend this book!
1,168 reviews13 followers
March 11, 2017
This is a beautifully done book put out as a companion to the Victoria series shown on PBS. It has wonderful full color photographs of scenes from the show as well as some pictures of the real Queen Victoria. The book comments on scenes from the series and includes facts about the real personnages in Victoria's life and pertinent political figures of the time. It is made personal with excerpts from Victoria's letters and journals.

There is more here than in the TV series. I learned so much about Victoria and the times. I highly recommend this book as a collectible and wonderful addition to any library.
Profile Image for Emily.
122 reviews48 followers
November 4, 2017
I was quite disappointed in this book because while the pictures were lovely, the structure was lacking. First of all, there was one significant historical error in the book. This is especially weird because 3 pages after the error, there's literally a page from Queen Victoria's journal that contradicts the error. And the journal pages themselves were sometimes hard to read--I would have prefer a transcript of the pages instead. Also in these journals, there would sometimes be parenthetical statements that were clearly inserted by the author, but there was no distinction between them and Queen Victoria's writings. Also, the transitions between subjects was sometimes jarring.

This book as a whole was only ok.
Profile Image for Thebooktrail.
1,879 reviews336 followers
October 23, 2016
Booktrail the locations: Victoria letters

I do love a book that accompanies and enhances what you see on the television and this is just lovely! The photos are gorgeous and the behind the scenes information is very interesting. It more than enhances the book and with the historical snippets this is both a coffee table book and one to treasure. Victoria's letters are really nicely woven into a book that captures your imagination and it's a very worth purchase - one to treasure!
Profile Image for Sandy.
1,162 reviews
August 22, 2023
I love anything to do with the House of Windsor and the monarchy. I loved this series and I loved this book. I didn't really have much of a knowledge of Queen Victoria going into this read. What amazes me the most is how much she wrote in journals. She has over a 100 volumes. I can't imagine waking up and finding that you are Queen at 18. I can't imagine accusing someone of being pregnant and finding they have a liver tumor. Her life is fascinating to me.
Profile Image for Elma Voogdt.
875 reviews16 followers
May 23, 2019
Zo af en toe komt er een boek op je pad waar je meteen iets mee hebt. Victoria – de jonge koningin is zo een boek. Alleen al de cover maakt dat je tot het boek aangetrokken wordt.. Het straalt je tegemoet.

Koningin Victoria , ja er is al veel overgeschreven en dat zal ook wel zo blijven, een bijzondere, krachtige en moedige koningin die blijft fascineren (als je een liefhebber bent van de monarchie etc.) Is het boek vernieuwend? Nee er staat niet iets in wat nog niet bekend was, maar dat maakt het boek zeker niet minder. Dit boek sluit namelijk aan bij de tv serie ” Victoria”. Je vind in het boek dus ook de profielen van de hoofdrolspelers, en prachtige foto’s van de serie.

Het leven van de jonge koningin Victoria wordt uitvoerig beschreven met fragmenten uit haar dagboeken. Wat in dit geval bijzonder is : de dagboek-fragmenten zijn vertaald in het Nederlands en “handgeschreven” afgedrukt in het boek. Complimenten aan degene die daar voor verantwoordelijk is naast de uitgeverij. Is dat dan bijzonder? Ja in de vele boeken die wij van Victoria lezen is vaak dan niet altijd de originele afdruk van zo een fragment overgenomen.

Tevens vinden we in het boek een stamboom van de Hannover’s ( waar Victoria van afstamt.) Een blik achter de schermen van de tv serie. De Rolverdeling komt ook aanbod.

Samengevat : Een dik en stevig boek , die absoluut de moeite waard is van het lezen en bekijken. Dus ben je fan van de serie ” Victoria”, dan mag dit boek niet op je boekenplank ontbreken. Dat geldt ook voor de liefhebber van het Britse Koningshuis, dan hoort dit zeker in je verzameling thuis.
Profile Image for Gothica Noctua.
118 reviews
February 21, 2022
I picked this up with my audiobook voucher, hoping it would be a long collection of the Queen's correspondence, without realising it was a tie-in to the ITV drama "Victoria" - although Jenna Coleman on the cover should have given it away!

That said, aside from a few jarring moments where actors and their characters from the series are mentioned, this is a good, easy-listen and brief biography about Queen Victoria's early life and reign, covering her from childhood up to motherhood. It perhaps doesn't go as in-depth as a more academic biography, but the key facts and some great insights are here nevertheless.

It features extracts from Victoria's diary, letters and the press of the day (even if there were much less than I initially expected!), and the use of multiple narrators helps bring the named figures to life more distinctly than one sole voice.

The last chapter is devoted to "behind the scenes" of the TV series, which is interesting in its own way, and by being left to the end, it doesn't disrupt the biography.
Profile Image for Johannes.
177 reviews7 followers
November 7, 2022
Few monarchs have so many biographers as HM Queen Victoria (I) had, and still has. And yet, at this point, there is very little to add to her story, sadly her daughter HRH Princess Beatrice, the Dowager Princess Henry of Battenberg destroyed all her original journals, edited (censored them mostly), and had them copied again so what we know is pretty much all there is unless copies are found elsewhere which I doubt since Princess Beatrice burnt them all.

Rappaport is... entertaining enough if wanted but as Victoria, the series, wasn't anything special to any Victoria aficionado, (I mean, come on, she hugging her children!? Victoria didn't like children at all, and was wary of intimacity with them of any sort) you can tell how this book goes about.
It does not add anything, especially if you read her journal/letters before, and there are so much snippets from the main characters stories that felt borrowed from Wikipedia.

All in all, I can only describe with one word: *méh*
332 reviews4 followers
May 7, 2017
I received this book as giveaway. Inspired by the TV series "Victoria" that covers the early years and the beginning of the reign of Queen Victoria the book is worthy by itself, and you don't need to be a fan of the series to enjoy it. Victoria , the TV series, is a production filmed with meticulous attention to sets and costumes . The companion book is not filled with stills of the cast in full costume and also works as a guide to "who plays whom." But the most appealing aspect of the book, in my opinion, is that it includes contemporary prints and paintings of Queen Victoria and her forebears, as well as excerpts from her own diaries and letters. Most importantly, the companion contains superb historical commentaries by Helen Rappaport, a highly regarded historian well known for her books on Victorian England.
768 reviews2 followers
May 9, 2017
I thought that this might present a comparison between an actual historical account of the queen and several of the characters we meet in the film series. While watching season 1, I kept checking on the biographical information available on-line. The real people seem to have been quite different from the characters. For example Ernest, Albert's brother, was a libertine and contracted syphilis. From the on-line biographies he does not seem to have been the soulful character. The object of his love, was considerably older than he, in her late 30's, while he is about 24/25. But then again recall Benjamin Franklin's wry comment to his son about taking a mistress: an older woman is likely to be "so grateful' and less demanding of constant attention.

What I wanted was something less light and more historically informative. The pictures are great, however.
Profile Image for Sue.
457 reviews23 followers
September 15, 2020
I was amazed by Rappaport’s book about the four Romanov sisters and this one did not disappoint me either. I like how she handles historical figures objectively, writes based on real documents, diary entries and letters written by the subjects. I had a vague idea about Queen Victoria and not watched the tv show before I read this book. I’m amazed by her story and how she had to become a queen at such a young age, after being limited by her mother and her mother’s shady friend John Conroy. The liberation, coming of age and falling in love with Albert were the key points of this book. I did enjoy the Four Sisters more because in this book Rappaport talks about the tv drama rather too much for my liking. I will definitely give the tv show a chance and will be reading more of Rappaport’s works. She is my favorite researcher to read.
Profile Image for Angela Holland.
417 reviews53 followers
May 10, 2017
I was happy when I won this book from a Goodreads Giveaway. My daughter and I watched this show on PBS and really enjoyed it so to get the companion book was a win win. I really enjoyed reading this book. The pictures were nice. Not only did you have pictures from the mini-series but you had pictures of the real people. It was nice to not only read about the real Victoria, her court and all things royalty related but it was nice to read about the show. Most of the characters were real or based on a real person and this book explains that. I learned a lot about the Queen from reading this book. I have not read much about her in the past. In the end they book tells how the show was made, the costumes and the scenes were all made to be historically accurate. All in all a very good book.
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