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Ultima romantică. Biografia reginei Maria

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După ani de cercetări minuțioase în biblioteci și în arhive, Hannah Pakula a scris una dintre cele mai bune biografii de personalități istorice, care l-a sedus până și pe marele scriitor Graham Greene. Mai întâi trebuie salutată ambiția autoarei de a recompune tabloul istoric al unei vieți fabuloase valorificând toate sursele care i-au stat la îndemână, cărți, documente, corespondență și, în vremuri în care era aproape imposibil să ajungi la ele, jurnalul personal al Mariei și peste 1 200 de scrisori intime, aflate la Arhivele Statului de la București. Apoi trebuie salutate observațiile istorice pătrunzătoare, notele de umor și de ironie și mai ales stilul acestei cărți, agreabil și alert, vădind un puternic talent scriitoricesc, pe care l-a probat și în alte două biografii, una a împărătesei Victoria a Prusiei, iar cealaltă a lui Soong Mei-ling, soția liderului chinez Chiang Kai-shek.

516 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 1985

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About the author

Hannah Pakula

13 books32 followers
Hannah Pakula is the author of "The Last Empress," which was a New York Times notable book, "The Last Romantic: A Biograpy of Queen Marie of Roumania," which was called by Graham Greene the best biography and one of the three best books of the year, and "An Uncommon Woman: Empress Frederick," which was a Los Angeles Times Book Award finalist. Pakula has also written for magazines including Vanity Fair and book reviews for the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times. She lives in New York City.

Married to Robert L. Boorstin and widowed at thirty-five, she was married for twenty-five years to filmmaker Alan J. Pakula, who died in a freak car accident in 1998. She was a recipient of the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill medal in human rights.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 54 reviews
Profile Image for Ana Stanciu-Dumitrache.
967 reviews111 followers
March 3, 2018
O biografie foarte bine realizată a Reginei Maria, pe care eu o consider o binecuvântare pentru Romania din toate punctele de vedere. Aceasta nu e ficțiune, nu e o poveste plină de suspans care să te prindă, nu e un roman de relaxare. Nu e deloc ușor de citit. Sunt extrem de multe informații istorice, multe detalii și descrieri, stilul autoarei e obiectiv, iar toate persoanele menționate sunt atestate istoric. Este o operă ce include cam toate familiile regale ale Europei, de o mare amploare. Cu siguranță merită citită cel puțin o dată. E o lecție de istorie pe care orice român trebuie să o știe pentru a putea înțelege trecutul și felul în care plătim în prezent pentru el. Recunosc că mi-au plăcut mai mult jurnalele Mariei, pentru că regina a fost o scriitoare talentată și sensibilă. Însă opera de față prezintă evenimentele așa cum s-au întâmplat, fără nuanțări și interpretări. Jurnalele sunt subiective și întâmplările relatate influențate de sentimentele Mariei din acele momente. Maria a fost o regină despre care e o plăcere să citești, pentru că ai multe lecții de învățat de la ea. O femeie simplă, care vrea să fie iubită și înțeleasă, care se trezește într-o țară nouă, fără familie și care trebuie să își găsească menirea, lucru pe care îl face. A fost o regină devotată și și-a pus rolul mai presus decât condiția ei de femeie îndrăgostită sau de mamă.
Cred că autoarea a făcut o treabă foarte bună cu această biografie și merită apreciată pentru munca depusă: căutarea surselor istorice, investigația, prezentarea obiectivă a evenimentelor, căutarea perspectivelor diferite asupra evenimentelor și adunarea lor într-o carte de colecție. 😊
Profile Image for Gabriela Pistol.
643 reviews247 followers
April 21, 2025
Prima parte a titlului ar putea trimite cu gândul la o biografie romanțată, dar nu este deloc cazul. Dimpotrivă. Avem nu doar o biografie temeinic studiată și echilibrată a Reginei Maria (din care nu lipsesc tușele ironice la adresa vanității ei sau stilului literar siropos al scrierilor sale), ci și o foarte serioasă documentare a istoriei României monarhice, chiar cu extensii, de la Unirea Principatelor până la instaurarea regimului comunist.

Autoarea are aceeași atitudine echilibrată și față de restul figurilor, de la membri ai Casei Regale la lideri politici.
Pakula le arată meritele, lupta pentru câștigul României, acolo unde este cazul (mai ales la Prințul Barbu Știrbei, dar și în curajul și obstinația cu care Maria își promovează țara), dar pune pe tapet și corupția - cea mai putredă din Europa, zice ea, zic sursele vremii - și egoismul puterii de care nu scapă aproape nimeni (de la Ionel Brătianu și Maniu la Martha Bibescu și, mai ales, Regele Carol al II-lea). Nu se da în lături nici de la a le evoca viața amoroasă, de multe ori încâlcită, dar făra a o duce vreodată în derizoriu.

Este o carte consistentă, plină de detalii relevante din istoria României și din viețile personale ale celor care au condus-o, monarhia habsburgică și aristocrația / marea burghezie locale, poate nu în cel mai captivant stil literar, dar cu siguranță compensând prin abundența de informații și prin atitudinea decentă, neutră, față de protagoniști. Cele 500+ pagini sunt pe deplin justificate și niciodată plictisitoare.
Profile Image for Lindsey Meridith.
10 reviews9 followers
March 11, 2022
Eccentric, dramatic, almost to the point of being theatrical was by mere definition- Regina Maria. A granddaughter of Queen Victoria and granddaughter of Tsar Alexander II, Marie was destined for Queenship.

While Marie held romantic affections for the future George V, due to her mothers disdain for all things English, marriage was out of the question and a groom from a different country was found, Ferdinand of Roumania.

Marie was selflessly shipped off to a foreign land while still being a child herself. Marie was to try and win not only the Royal Family but also Roumania. An eccentric, free spirited young girl sent to a mediocre crown Family.

Hannah Pekula did a great job bringing about the story of a lesser known royal (despite her grandmother being none other than Queen Victoria) to an even lesser known kingdom. Pekula’s research was evident however, told like a story. I was sopping up every page looking for more information!

While researched very well, I would’ve liked to know more about the relationship and closeness she shared with her spineless husband. I also wondered how Carmen Sylva’s behaviors continued upon her return from exile... she was clearly annoying in the very least to her husband so how did she get away with so much?

I really liked how Marie’s relationships with her parents, siblings, children, other courts, and prominent individuals were included. I also really appreciated how Pekula really showed that Marie stuck to her guns, cared about her people, and was willing to do whatever she could for anyone.

This book read like a well researched novel but was story telling. I recommend this to anyone interested in WW1, politics, royalty, and anyone with interest in learning about lesser know countries. Marie was fantastic and it is a shame she was so easily forgotten.
Profile Image for Bogdan Raț.
161 reviews58 followers
November 19, 2017
Cu toate că mi-a plăcut faptul că a prezentat evenimentele istorice din perioada în cauză, pentru a întelege mai bine contextul în care se afla personajul biografiei (și trecând peste una sau două greșeli minore la inceputul cărții cu privire la dăți și existența unori „înțelegeri”) - așadar o mică lecție de istorie - uneori am avut sentimentul că Maria nu mai este în prim plan și se prezintă un interes puțin cam mare pentru alte personaje. Dar per total o biografie bună, probabil cea mai bună a ei, bine documentată.

„Când vei citi aceste rânduri, poporul meu, eu voi fi trecut pragul tăcerii eterne... Și totuși, dată fiind marea iubire pe care ți-am jurat-o, vreau să-ți vorbesc din nou... Am devenit a ta la bucurie și la durere. Privind înapoi, îmi este greu să spun care a fost mai mare, bucuria sau durerea. Cred că bucuria a fost mai mare, dar prea îndelungată a fost durerea.”
Profile Image for Cindie.
438 reviews33 followers
January 12, 2011
First 80% of book very good -- kind of real life Zelig. Marie, QUeen of Romania, was present for most of first 38 years of 20th century events. Hard to stomach her anti-Semitism, and the book drags at the end. Still, interesting look at a celebrity of her time that has disappeared from the current memory. Not mine -- now
Profile Image for Elena.
37 reviews7 followers
February 7, 2020
Really interesting books, I finally learnt more about this out of the ordinary queen!
I look forward to look more book relating to Regina Maria, and Romania as well, as I am fascinated by both.
I liked the style of the book, it managed to have a lot of informations, but it did not come across as boring, I look forward to read more of her books
Profile Image for Jean Marie.
200 reviews26 followers
June 28, 2017
I'm always looking for new women from history to study and learn about, always looking for that magical one that will be the focus of my future work in history. Queen Marie was originally introduce to me in Sex with the Queen by Eleanor Herman. The story of her not being allowed to be knocked out when giving birth because of the restrictions she was under due to her uncle and current king fascinated me. And it helped that she was one of the granddaughters of Queen Victoria.
This was a very easy biography to read, but that might be mainly because it's the most modern (in terms of the subject) I've read. I really enjoyed the author's unrelenting honesty about Marie. She was flighty and vain but she wasn't arrogant in the snobby sort of way, she was simply very naive. Marie is very endearing as a character and she becomes real through her struggles with her husband and children. She becomes alive with her love for her adoptive Roumania. I've always been fascinated by those crafy Eastern European countries and their people and this was a great look in on them through the eyes of their most beloved queen. A beautifully haunting biography of a beautifully sad woman.
Profile Image for Ileana.
3 reviews
October 16, 2013
Good history lesson for us Romanians.
Knowing the places is a plus in enjoying the book.
Profile Image for Simon.
870 reviews142 followers
March 30, 2020
Hannah Pakula wrote a very good biography of the Empress Frederick, so I thought I would give this a read. Marie of Roumania survives today as the punch line in a Dorothy Parker limerick or as a footnote for those of us into the dynasties of the late 19th and early 20th century. She was the descendant of a Romanov (her mother was the only daughter of Alexander II), a Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (her father was Alfred, son of Albert and Victoria) and she married a Hohenzollern. At 17. Her mother despised the English and wanted "Missy" out of the country; the senior branch of the German Imperial Family was sitting on the throne of the new Kingdom of Roumania, so off the pretty, badly-educated teenager went to marry the jug-eared, dull Ferdinand, Crown Prince. Missy duly popped out six children, one of whom died as a toddler. Three of the others grew up to be world-class pests, while the other two wound up . . . not. Shortly after the birth of her last child, World War I broke out.

So far this could have been the life of Marie Antoinette Lite, but despite the similarities, Missy was temperamentally not cut out for the guillotine. While she was a total loss as a nurse (unlike Alexandra and her older daughters), she also (unlike Alexandra and Marie Antoinette) never tried to meddle in military matters. The goal of the war for Marie was to keep Roumania out of it, or at least for her country not to side with the Central Powers. She achieved her goal when Roumania went in on the side of the Entente. Unfortunately for Marie, Russia shortly succumbed to the Bolsheviks (curtains for many of her Romanov cousins) and Roumania was then immediately surrounded by Austria-Hungary, Germany and a Soviet state that declared war upon the hapless country. She was forced into a humiliating peace with Germany, mass starvation descended upon the land, and there was agitation for the overthrow of the dynasty. Despite all of this, Marie seems to have enjoyed the war. She spent every day zooming out and about, laden with whatever she could find. The Queen swept into field hospitals, peasant villages, wherever she could drive the Rolls, and distributed hope as much as anything. And her people loved her for it, as Marie would always girlishly admit. As Pakula presents her, Marie is the weirdest combination of narcissism and self-knowledge imaginable. At the end of the war, Roumania is being trounced at the Versailles Conference when its government comes up with the brilliant idea of sending Queen Marie off to charm everyone into giving her Transylvania. She blows over to Paris and by glory, Roumania gets Transylvania and a fair chunk of Bulgaria. Every morning while they were doing her hair, Marie listened patiently as her handlers fed information into the royal brain. Full to the brim with historical statistics, Marie donned one of the dozens of Parisian frocks she picked up along the way and set off for a different official's conference room. Only Woodrow Wilson was unmoved, although Mrs. Wilson seems to have become a fan.

It was the high point of her life. Ferdinand died in 1927, and her truly awful oldest son Carol seized the throne. Carol had left town earlier in a sort of proto-Harry and Meghan move, although unlike Harry he was simply wanting alone time with his mistress. Carol had renounced the throne in favor of his son by his legitimate wife, but pretty much as soon as Dad cooled he wanted back in. Once he achieved the throne, he made life hell for his entire family. Marie died in 1938, at least in part because Carol insisted upon only Roumanian doctors as diagnosticians.

The book never really takes off as a biography, because unlike the Empress Frederick, Missy was never an important political player. Pakula tries to inflate her subject's relevance, but . . . on the other, Pakula is a good writer who never fails to hold the reader's interest.
Profile Image for Erin .
361 reviews5 followers
September 6, 2020
I think I first placed this book on my to-read list after finishing a book on Victoria's daughters. I wanted to see what happened to the next generation. Based on Goodreads dates, it was placed on the list before reading Born To Rule, which is a book about Victorian's reigning queen granddaughters. I'm wondering when I placed on the list because this book doesn't add anything that Born To Rule goes over. Marie is an engaging queen up to a point. Married off to a German prince at the immature age of 15, you do see her evolve to a formible woman. It's interesting to see how her nationality changes in her writings. She's born English with a Russian mother, educated in Germany, and then marries a German prince to rule Romania. When all these identities collide in World War I, you're not sure which way she'll turn. Her relationships with her children and relatives are fascinating. Marie was an author and avid letter writer. Much of her original correspondence and thoughts are expressed in the book. The book does a great job of setting the stage for the history of Romania, a country I didn't know much about. Sadly, the book is published during the Cold War so the epilogue doesn't let you know if Marie's memory was restored with the fall of Communism.
Profile Image for Monica.
22 reviews
February 21, 2020
Pentru cineva care cunostea familia regala din manualele scolare sau din povestile bunicilor care au trait in vremea respectiva, cartea este o surpriza placuta: Regina Maria nu a fost nici sfanta portretizata dupa '90, nici femeia depravata portretizata de comunisti. A fost doar o femeie, produs al vremurilor sale, o regina nici prea scolita, nici prea constienta de realitatile exterioare palatului in care a crescut. Dar a luptat pentru ea, pentru tara, pentru familie, pentru monarhie (in ce ordine e greu de zis), iar felul sau de a fi si faptele sale din perioada cat a fost regina a Romaniei sunt, in mod clar, extraordinare, indiferent de motivatia sa.

Cartea e foarte bine scrisa si documentata si e interesant de citit pentru perspectiva unui strain, asupra vietii din Romania, asupra politicii, nobilimii si monarhiei din tara.
Profile Image for Zully Mustafa.
Author 9 books18 followers
March 13, 2019
Una din cele mai bune biografii ale Reginei Maria, dacă nu chiar cea mai bună biografie din toate timpurile a unei personalități istorice. Este și o radiografie a societății românești de la 1895 pînă la apariția comunismului, marea spaimă a Reginei Maria. Din fericire, dacă putem spune așa, regina a murit cu 8 ani înainte de instaurarea plăgii roșii.

Hannah Pakula este o autoare specializată în biografii, a cărei obiectivitate și muncă imensă de investigație pune la loc de cinste imaginea unei regine ai cărei ultimi ani din viață au fost o dezamăgire continuă, trăită cu demnitate și tristețe, după o viață plină de provocări și după ce comuniștii au șters-o din paginile de istorie.

Ar trebui citită de orice român care vrea să-și cunoască istoria în cele mai fine detalii.
Profile Image for Joan Stewart Smith.
22 reviews7 followers
June 7, 2020
I kept asking myself, "Why don't I LIKE Queen Marie?" as I read this well-researched, informative book.

My guess is writer Hannah Pakula (also a human rights activist, husband of late filmmaker Alan Pakula) started out fascinated with her biographical subject but changed her mind a bit midstream. In contrast, I sensed Pakula really admired Vicky, Queen Victoria’s eldest child who became Empress of Germany, in her previous book, "An Uncommon Woman."

Queen Marie of Romania had enormous enthusiasm, courage, charisma, beauty and fame, but she was also vain, anti-semitic, totally convinced of the divine right of monarchs, and self-righteous. She had no problems with her soldiers shamefully looting Budapest at the end of the Hungarian–Romanian war of 1919. Although Romania itself suffered horribly from the punitive WW I reparations of the Central Powers, Romania, in turn, seemed to take the same approach toward an enemy.

Despite the title, "The Last Romantic," this is not chick lit. You'll learn a lot. The book focuses on the politics of the day and characters on the world stage. Stay with it, as the plot turns toward the end when someone unexpectedly turns into a monster, and we can't help but feel for her. Those unfamiliar with the crowned heads of Europe would benefit from a genealogy chart, showing her lineage from grandparents Queen Victoria and Tsar Alexander II.

An ad spokesperson for Ponds (through ad agency JPL) in the 20s/30s, Queen Marie is lovely to look at. Her luminous beauty also seduced me. Although there were plenty of photographs, I kept wishing for more!
Profile Image for R. Fulleman.
Author 7 books7 followers
June 23, 2020
The Last Romantic tells of the life of Romania's Queen Marie. It's a history that's not been heard of by many. Due to in great part to Queen Marie's oldest son, who became King Carol II, her life has almost been entirely erased from the history of Romania for anyone born after WWII. The biography chronicles the various marriages between the royalty across Europe, the rising of the Bolsheviks, and the fight for the lands now described as Romania. It's also an interesting read as it talks about the Americans from the point of view of a Romanian, albeit born in England.

It is difficult to imagine someone like Queen Marie, so dedicated to her country, to have family who virtually made her into a prisoner, taking away her inheritance and monies made from her writings.

Personally, for me, a descendant of Romanians who lived there before and after WWI, it was informative and educational, while being a well-told story of a woman's life. My only criticism, I do think it could have been better served if some of the vocabulary used was lowered a bit for the average reader, but I liked it none the less.
Profile Image for Jessica.
4 reviews2 followers
November 23, 2014
This is one of the most engaging and well-written biographies that I have ever read. This book investigates the life of Queen Marie, royal society of the time, and the socio-political events that took place leading up and following World War I. It allows the reader to glimpse woes, triumphs, and ambitions of small nation-states during the early-mid 1900s, a topic that is not often addressed in US history textbooks. Queen Marie herself is an interesting, intelligent, and colorful character and Hannah Pakula does an excellent job exploring different aspects of Marie's personality. Though some of the text is a bit dated (think cold-war era 1980s), the story itself is timeless and charming. I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Dorothy.
128 reviews13 followers
November 14, 2015
Eh. DISAPPOINTMENT. By the end of the book I didn't care about Queen Marie and just wanted it over. The fault in this book was the reliance on Marie's own autobiography, letters and memoirs to frame the narrative. She was a woman of monumental ego and self-conscious self-awareness that amounted to solipsistic egocentrism. The historically important personages around her were props to her self-aggrandizement. The truly seismic historical events and the autocratic feudalism that was Rumanian cultural and political history was merely a watercolor backdrop to everything Marie.

To me this was an enormous disappointment after reading An Uncommon Woman. Hard to believe it was the same author.
120 reviews4 followers
May 28, 2017
I learned a lot about Queen Victoria's sprawling, dysfunctional brood of grandchildren, the birth of Romania - and why they imported a foreign ruler, a career royal (King Carol I) in 1866 - and WWI. Very engagingly written, and Queen Marie makes an entertaining subject: clueless and self-dramatizing in some respects, yet insightful in others, not to mention prolific (her letters and books are quoted extensively). I loved her description of Woodrow Wilson mansplaining during the Paris talks.
Profile Image for Liviu Mihai Irimia.
32 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2023
Extraordinary book ! A fascinating life story, a comprehensive history lesson and a look at the daily lives of three generations of Romania's royal family from the beginning of the 20th century.
I wonder if Hannah Pakula, writing this book, understood what a beautiful gift she is giving to Romanians. The very year of the book's publication - 1985 - was in the middle of the "Golden Age" of Ceaușescu's communism, when, after about 40 years, royalty was no more than a diffuse stain in Romania's historical past, not included in history textbooks, with undefined characters and vaguely known as bad for the state and Romanian people. Even today, 30 years after the fall of communism, the history of the royal family of Romania and its contribution to the realization of the state are not fully accepted, popularized and exposed to the Romanians, as a reparation, even belated. So, such an impartial, very well written and documented book is for the generation of those who did not have the natural right to know their true history, a window to the past.
The story told by Pakula is truthful, historically attested and honest. It seems in places that an apology is made for Mary, but her human sins mentioned where they belong, ensure the perfect balance of the narrative. All in all, they accurately profile an unparalleled personality and argue for the extraordinary popularity she enjoyed after the First World War. It also seems that King Ferdinand is excessively downplayed, but the valuable mentions of his character, honesty, devotion to the people he devoted himself to (almost a martyrdom), the quality of the people he surrounded himself with, and ultimately the correctly presented legacy of his reign ensures the correct image of the sovereign. Finally, together with Charles I, together with Queen Mary, he built a country, gave it name, performance, dignity and well-being. Equally correctly presented, generating almost revolt in the reader by successfully describing a miserable character, is the profile of Charles II. The details of the narrative do not omit anything: neither Maria's serious moral sins, nor her narcissism and vanity, nor his faulty political orientation in relation to the Jews, nor Ferdinand's weaknesses, but neither their qualities.
A perfect exposure of the historical context, of the catastrophe generated for Eastern Europe by the birth and spread of Bolshevism, of the arrogance of traditional monarchies, of the cowardice and irredentism of some former empires. All make this book a clear, objective, honest and compelling history lesson. And it offer to Romania a fair portrait, which presents it as a nation struggling through history and surviving through intelligence, modesty and fight to empires that thought they were eternal.
In the end, Mary loved a people who deserved her love and sacrifice, but who, by positioning herself at the stormed gates of Europe, failed to return her love in equal measure. Even today, more than 100 years after the First World War, in the city where Mary took refuge and fought for the physical existence of her people, there is no statue or any other monument to honor her memory. It certainly has something to do with the fact that it always was too close to the ever-volatile border of its great neighbor to the east, the same one that once stolen Queen Mary's jewels and then removed her from the history books.
Profile Image for teodosia.
110 reviews4 followers
January 6, 2024
Să-i mulțumim autoarei că și-a îndreptat atenția spre colțul ăsta îndepărtat al Europei și a realziat o biografie exemplară asupra uneia dintre cele mai mari femei pe care țara noastră a avut norocul s-o găzduiască (dacă a fost sau nu o gazdă bună, rămâne de văzut). Totuși, ce dezamăgire că românii n-au reușit să adune atâtea amănunte despre Regină și s-o onoreze cu o biografie pe măsura ei. Eram sceptică la început, de ce să n-o recunosc? Citisem Jurnalele de război ale Reginei și eram convinsă că o biografie mai amănunțită decât jurnalul Reginei, în care esenția vieții vibra cel mai puternic, nu putea face nimeni. Prejudecată stupidă. Într-adevăr, prima parte a cărții, puțin și din a doua, se află sub auspiciile jurnalelor ei de război, fiind citate adeseori citate pentru a oferi veridicitate celor spuse de autoare. O carte în care este ilustrată atmosfera dominată de marii regi și regine a Europei, toate jocurile de culise din spatele căsătoriilor, desprinse toate dintr-o epocă care pare atât de îndepărtată, încât cu greu îmi vine să cred că s-a întâmplat doar cu mai mult de 100 de ani în urmă.
Cartea este o biografie romanțată, dar nu pot să nu-i admir autoarei descrierile despre evenimentele politice care au culminat începutul de secol și documentarea sistematică pe care a întreprind-o pentru realizarea acestui volum. Toate aspectele vieții Reginei sunt analziate în cartea aceasta - de la naștere, copilărie, căsătorie, la încoronare și ultimii ani tulburători ai vieții mei, culminați de schimbările politice internaționale. Sunt descrise cu lux de amănunte toate călătoriile întreprinse de Regină în străinătate - de la modificările pe care le-au făcut hotelurile la care urma să fie cazată Regina, până la impresia pe care a strânit-o în presa occidentală și de peste ocean devotamentul și frumusețea ei. În volum se reunesc aspectele pozitive ale Mariei cu cele negative, însă chiar și infidelitățile și relativa nepăsare față de educația primilor copii sunt justicate de către autoare. Iar finalul cărții, cu descrierea atât de amănunțită a drumului până la Curtea de Argeș, a strânit în mine emoții puternice, pe care nici nu bănuiam că le pot nutri pentru o femeie atât de îndepărtată de mine din toate punctele de vedere. Cât de mult regret când mă gândesc prin câte dificultăți a trecut femeia aceasta, ca mai apoi meritele să-i fie recunoscute de-o mână de oameni. E cumplit să mă gândesc că implicarea ei în cadrul restructurării societății românești e atât de cntroversată și că se pun în evidență doar infidelitățile sale, când a avut parte de o asemenea doză de devotament, amestecat cu o sinceritate copilărească. În orice împrejurare, am să-i pun în evidență calitățile aceste femei cu o inimă atât de bună precum a ei („inimă bună” e un fel considerat simplist de a mă exprima. dar să nu uităm adevărata valoare a acestei expresii). Iar finalul cărții, când se evocă devotamentul țăranilor pentru ea, m-a făcut să devin melancolică pentru o epocă pe care știu că n-am s-o mai regăsesc niciodată în istorie. Felul în care poporul de rând și-a luat rămas-bun de la o Regină care a făcut trecerea de la o societate orientală la una occidentală demonstrează calitatea supremă a țăranului român, atât de îndrăgit de Regină de altfel și totuși atât de rar întâlnit în epoca contemporană. În urma cortegiului funerar a rămas o Românie pe care le dispariție, dacă nu cumva deja dispărută, pe care mă bucur că Regina Maria n-a mai văzut-o.
Profile Image for Socrate.
6,745 reviews269 followers
August 29, 2021
Dacă în familia Reginei Victoria lucrurile s-ar fi petrecut ca de obicei - adică întocmai cum dorise Regina -, tatăl Măriei a României nu s-ar fi însurat niciodată cu mama acesteia. Obiecţiile Reginei au fost însă nesocotite şi la 23 ianuarie 1874 a avut loc căsătoria celui de-al doilea fiu al său, Prinţul Alfred, Duce de Edinburgh, cunoscut în familie sub numele de Affie, cu Marea Ducesă Măria Alexandrovna, unica fiică a Ţarului.
Regina încercase de multă vreme să-l însoare pe Affie în altă parte. Cu doisprezece ani mai înainte îl plasase ferm în culise, cînd aranjase întîlnirea dintre fratele său mai mare Bertie (viitorul Eduard al Vll-lea) şi adorabila Prinţesă Alexandra a Danemarcei. Aşa cum îi scria Victoria fiicei sale mai mari Vicky, Prinţesă Moştenitoare a Germaniei, „Affie ar fi gata s-o ia numaidecît şi, într-adevăr, dacă B. ar refuza, aş propune căsătoria lui Affie cu ea peste trei ani. Va fi foarte bine situat, are perspective frumoase şi este fermecător".
La data aceea, Ducele de Edinburgh avea doar optsprezece ani.
856 reviews8 followers
September 23, 2018
As a person interested in female historical figures (with books written by female historians) this title fit the bill. Queen Marie truly was a royal celebrity of her era. Born a granddaughter of Queen Victoria and Tsar Alexander II, she was a beautiful, talented and intelligent woman. Obviously her duty was to marry for dynastic reasons which she did to Crown Prince Ferdinand of Romania. The marriage was successful by royal standards although Maria would continually struggle to care a meaningful role for herself --and succeed overall. Surprisingly, it was her son, Carol II who proved the biggest obstacle for her despite her international reputation of a politically astute representative of Romania (she was at Versailles after World War I to ensure her country's position).
Pakula's text is impressive, thorough and accessible to all readers.
Profile Image for Colleen.
343 reviews27 followers
October 14, 2024
Pakula finally finds a proper balance between focusing on her principle subject and the world around her. Perhaps because Queen Marie left so much of her own writing behind, the Last Romantic is a better read than her other two books. Pakula does skim quickly over Marie's early life, compressing the family's many moves or barely mentioning them.

The pace slows down with the war, and Pakula does start losing focus on the queen, especially bouncing around the diplomats at the peace talks. I also really disliked the way Pakula referred to the other Romania royal women; she never has anything positive to say about them, particularly the two Elisabeths.
Profile Image for Anastasia.
59 reviews
March 1, 2021
O adevarata Regina pentru care tara si Dinastia au fost mai presus chiar de propriii copii.
O carte scrisa accesibil, dar cu multe nume regale din toata Europa, cu multe, foarte multe franturi din scrisorile Mariei catre rudele dragi, cu detalii despre viata ei amoroasa, dar mai ales cu importante detalii despre dorinta si, de cele mai multe ori, reusitele ei in ceea cea priveste politica interna, dar si externa a Romaniei.
Minunata!
Profile Image for Marilyn.
571 reviews
September 22, 2025
Thorough background on not only Marie, but the other monarchs of that time. The traditions and pressures on royalty seem to have changed little over the years. Her biographer paints her as a tireless servant but one beset by rumor and unbelievable restrictions both by political wrangling and scheming family members. Good prep for an upcoming trip to Romania.
6 reviews
April 15, 2019
Learned about the Romanian royal family and its role. Our history bools denaturated or hid their involvement. A strong woman during difficult periods of Romania has influenced a lot our people and future. The mother of Romania like common people named her.
Profile Image for Laraf123.
148 reviews
February 25, 2020
Three and a half. Perhaps a bit bogged down by military details. I'll never understand why the carnage of World War I was deemed necessary to continue more than six months. So difficult to read about even a century later. I suppose that is not the author's fault.
Profile Image for Diana.
15 reviews
January 8, 2021
It really gives a realistic point of view about what has going on in those times. But what really hit hard to me is anti seministism. If you want to know the most beloved leader in Romania look no further.
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