If anyone bothers to have a look at my book lists you will see i favor history above all other genres - and that Victorian England holds a special appeal in my heart.
Some of you will say - another bio of Queen V?? what more is there to tell? well...it depends on who does the telling/writing, and i have to say i was pleasantly surprised with this one - i got it courtesy of netgalley in exchange for a free review, but i assure you, in no way does it influence my good opinion of it!
Victoria is a wonderful definition of a paradox in the shape of a human being - a model of female authority, yet totally in agreement with the ideal of female domesticity that bound women to home and family at the time; The ruler of an empire, yet submissive and one can argue "dominated" by her Dear Albert to the point of obsession - her never ending mourning of him is the perfect example of that obsession (along with the countless statues she had built of him after his death!).
That divisive/divided nature is perhaps the reason with after all these years she remains, along Charles II and Elizabeth I, on my top 3 of fav english kings.
Anyone who has read a reasonable amount of books on the Queen and her times will know by now how heavily censored her journals were, both by her younger daughter/private secretary Princess Beatrice and also by her son Bertie, King Edward VII - so, whenever someone comes along that has had access to a new source of non edited information on Queen V, its bound to interest the fans of the period.
Julia Baird had such luck, having stumbled upon some sources that were thankfully saved from the editing, and she uses them to bring Queen Victoria to light in a remarkably modern way.
It is clear to anyone who has read about Victoria that after all the controlling of her life up until she became Queen, she would when given freedom turn into something of a little "tyrant" - lets not forget she was merely 18!
The determined, controlling side of her personality was there from an early age, its clear in her diaries and perhaps not surprising - she needed an iron will to survive all that her mother and Conroy did to her!
Up to here nothing new you will say, however bear with me, because i do believe this one is worth the trouble, because the whole book ends up being more about Victoria the mother-queen, the woman, than just the queen we know from previous books.
Julia Baird makes use of extensive excerpts from Victoria's diaries and letters (here are the new sources) to make her come alive to us in a 21st century voice and with surprising modern tones. Victoria displays the typical teenage girl emotions, perhaps just a "little" exarcebated given the power placed on her hands - her capacity to love and hate with equal intensity is perhaps best shown in the scandal regarding Lady Flora Hastings - whom she choose to believe was pregnant with an illegitimate child (Lady Flora was a Lady in Waiting to her mother) but turns out she was dying of cancer. This was the first setback to a popular beginning to her reign, caused totally by her prejudices against her mother and her circle (of course the detestable Conroy).
Her capacity for love, again to the point of obsession, comes alive in her devotion and adoration of her husband Albert. I for one believe this intensity in all she did at the beginning of her reign was derived from a childhood deprived of love, attention and devotion - especially from her mother, who was totally under Conroy´s influence (and maybe some say had an affair with him). Controlling Victoria, and with that the throne, was everyone´s agenda, so perhaps its not surprising that when "let loose" at 18 she goes on what some might call "an orgy" of freedom, parties, dancing and dominating the office of Queen.
Frankly, from a modern point of view, and even though i appreciate the fact that they loved each other, i have always disliked how she literally bended herself to her husbands wishes and rules, perhaps not at first but as the marriage years went by she relied on him so totally that the domeneering woman of those first years was literally buried alive under the "kleines frauchen" mantle given to her by Albert. Again this i think derives from a chilhood without a father figure and, pardon my french, her very high libido that made her "weak in the knees" at the sight of her Albert...lol...sorry, couldnt help myself!..now that i think of it, Freud would have a blast studying these two!
Victoria, once Queen and released from Kensington Palace´s shadow, Loved - She loved being adored, She loved being Queen, she loved having Albert by her side, and she had a like i said a very high libido and clearly loved sex, even though she hated pregnancy and childbirth.
Ah, her children, its surprising the amount of influence she had on them, given how miserable she must at times have made them..but influence she did, especially her eldest, Princess Vicky - to sometimes disastrous consequences. She was far less hopeful for her second son Bertie, King Edward VII, who eventually succeeded her. Both she and Albert wanted to make him into a copy of daddy and ended up making his childhood miserable, he is perhaps their worse example of parenting - yet its is somewhat ironic to see that despite all the efforts he turned into the opposite of what Victoria wished, but still was a pretty good monarch, very well liked by the public, given how "normal" his behavior was.
although in essence by this time she was a constitutional monarch, Victoria still managed to have a good bit of influence in government policies, which in itself is a testament to her determination and courage of imposing herself in a male dominated world, thus reigning over England during the Industrial revolution and when the British Empire was at its largest. One question that Baird brings up several times across the pages was if Prince Albert had any power in England, if he was perhaps slowly influencing Parliament - he wasn't very successful with parliament i think, although he did manage to win the respect of some key british politicians, truth is the best way for him to force his ideas into acceptance was through his wife.
At the end of the day,the fact is that Albert was never accepted by the court/country in full - he was the husband of the queen, but given his foreign origin he was always looked at with a weary eye (funny enough his death was perceived in a very particular way). He didn't live long enough to exert much power in England, but the depression that Queen Victoria would experience had after his death in 1861, and that actually to an extent began with the death of her own mother just the year before, well it would have some momentous consequences for England.
Her life after Albert , her "existence" she would perhaps call it, was very different, the man she had grown totally dependent on was gone.
The mourning of Albert was forever, however with time and a little help from one John Brown she recovered her will to, if not live, at least to rule and control her country and certainly her family. Brown is a mistery, a confidant, an independent friend when she most needed one, a gift of sorts from her "beloved Albert" who had spoken highly of him and was extremely confident in his skills. Then he, too, died 20 years before she did. She however remained active with Prime Minister Gladstone and the Boer Wars at the end of the century. She outlived four of her nine children and lived long enough to open the door to some serious social changes in Great Britain, especially for women.
All in all this is a very enjoyable read, full of background social history that gives you a better perception of what life was life during Victoria's reign. Baird does a great job of telling a tale told a thousand times before with a new, vivid pace - along with i must had, an amazing amount of research that is a treasure trove of information on further research for fans on this period.
First time reading about Queen Victoria, by all means start here. Been there, done that, read them all...well, have you really?Victoria the Paradox is and will remain an endless source of fascination, so go ahead and read bio number 1999...i bet you wont regret it!
Happy Readings!