I am an avid reader of biographies which deal with history of the monarchy, and I especially love those written by Antonia Fraser, so I was very excited to start this book by Darren Baker. However, despite the glowing comments on the back cover of the book being ‘enterprising’ and ‘engaging’, I found that, sadly, this was very heavy-going. To give the book a chance, I read half of it (about 170 pages) but this thick book made up of 350-odd pages of small type hits you with fact after fact - with no illustrations or anything to break up the facts - making the text very hard to digest, follow, or engage with. I would start off reading (and trying to digest) the information, but after a matter of minutes, I consistently ended up skimming paragraphs trying to find information of interest that could possibly re-spark my reading again. Now, I hate skimming an author's work, as I see it as disrespectful of their time, energy, and intelligence, but I felt that I needed to quickly find something I could catch onto to regain my interest. Sadly, this interesting information didn’t present itself by page 170 and so I gave up - something I very rarely do. There is no doubt that the author has carried out intelligent research and knows what he is writing about, but it was just a bit too dense for me, at the particular point in time that I was reading the book.
I will return to this book and give it another go, and will update this review when I have done so.