Le nouveau roman de Juliette Benzoni met en scène la duchesse d'Abrantès, figure de la vie parisienne par sa beauté, son esprit caustique et son extravagance. Mariée au général Junot, qui la trompe avec Caroline Bonaparte, dame d'honneur de Madame Mère, l'empereur Napoléon la surnommait affectueusement " la petite peste "... Eté 1807 : Que fait dans la cour de l'Elysée et en plein en nuit la voiture du Général Junot, et qui est cette jeune et ravissante femme en train de perdre patience à l'intérieur ? Liée depuis l'enfance à la famille Bonaparte, Laure Martin de Permon, d'origine corse et grecque n'a encore jamais réussi à démêler si elle aimait ou détestait l'apprenti général avec ses jambes maigres dans ses bottes trop vastes dont un destin véritablement fabuleux a fait l'empereur Napoléon Ier ? A seize ans, elle a épousé, par amour réciproque, le général Andoche-Alexandre Junot, un homme magnifique doué d'une exceptionnelle bravoure. Or, Junot voue à son empereur un dévouement et une admiration proche de l'idolâtrie. Gouverneur de Paris, couvert d'honneurs et de richesses, bientôt duc d'Abrantès, il donnerait sans hésitation tout cela pour n'être plus qu'un petit aide de camp attaché nuit et jour à la personne de son dieu... Ce qui agace prodigieusement sa femme devenue dame d'honneur de Madame Mère, une fonction qu'elle ne remplit pas souvent alors qu'elle est l'amie intime de la charmante et folle Pauline devenue princesse Borghèse par mariage. Les relations ne sont pas, de loin, aussi bonnes avec Caroline, la plus jeune des sœurs Bonaparte, devenue grande-duchesse de Berg puis reine de Naples. Les couteux sont même tirés entre elle et Laure quand celle-ci découvre que son mari est l'amant de Caroline, que celle-ci s'en vante volontiers et qu'elle a entrepris de pourrir la vie de sa rivale. Autre souci : Napoléon depuis la dernière campagne semble prendre soin d'éloigner peu à peu Junot de son entourage immédiat, ce qui met le malheureux à la torture. Un sujet de conversation fréquent entre l'Empereur et celle qui, depuis l'affaire du " Chat botté ", il a surnommé la " Petite peste ".
Juliette Benzoni, (Andrée-Marguerite-Juliette) was a French author and international bestseller in several genres, including historical romance, historical fiction, mystery and screenwriting. Named by the Media as the « Queen of History Novels » and « Daughter of Alexander Dumas».
Born 1920 in Paris and growing up in an upper-middle-class family. At the age of nine, she discovered her passion for history while looking at a photo of ‘Joan of Arc’. Benzoni studied at the Institut Catholique de Paris’, philosophy, law and literature. At the age of fifteen, her parents moved to Saint-Mandé where she lived until her death.
In 1941, she married a doctor from Dijon, and was soon mother of two children. During that period, she studied at the libraries of Dijon the History of the Dukes of Burgundy, where she stumbled on the Legend of the Order of the Golden Fleece, which would later inspire her for her Catherine series.
In 1950, her husband died and she went to Morocco, visiting relatives of her late husband and joined the editorial staff at a radio station and met her future husband, Colonel Count André Benzoni di Conza. They married in 1953, but because of the unstable political situation, she returned to Paris, while her husband was to join the 6th Regiment of Moroccan Spahis in Hué.
Back in Paris, she launched into journalism and worked for various Newspapers, Magazines and wrote for ‘Confidences’ historical articles and interviewed celebrities such as Jean Cocteau, Jean Marais, Erich von Stroheim and Maurice Chevalier.
In 1959, Gérald Gauthier, director of the Press Agency at Opéra Mundi, watched her in a popular television Quiz show and impressed by her historical knowledge about the Italian Renaissance asked her if she were able to write a historical romance series in the style of Anne Golon's ‘Angélique’.
Benzoni affirmed, remembering her fascination for the ‘Order of the Golden Fleece’. Her research for that soon-to-become Bestseller took up three years and in 1963, 'Catherine, Il suffit d’un amour’ was published. The success was enormous and there followed in 1965, a Song called ‘Catherine, ma mie’ composed by Paul Amar, text by Juliette Benzoni.
The Catherine series was translated into 26 languages. Benzoni's Works includes: 3 Single Novels, 17 series, 18 self-contained short stories; 55 million Readers and 300 million books sold Worldwide. She was a huge fan of the books by Agatha Christie, Anne Perry and Ken Follet. In 1978 she received from the White House a letter by President ‘Ronald Reagan’ for the way she described in her Novel ‘The Lure of the Falcon’ the Independence War!
Four of her Bestsellers the ‘Catherine, Marianne, Le Gerfaut and La Florentine’ series were filmed for French television, for which she wrote the Screenplay, together with Jean Chatenet. Although her later works were not widely translated, in 1984, she was one of the top ten female French writers whose works were translated into English. Two weeks before her death in 2016, her last book ‘Le Vol du Sancy: Des carats pour Ava’? was published. It was the 15th adventure of her favourite hero Prince Aldo Morosini, a mystery series.
Her Awards and Honours: 1973 the Alexandre Dumas Prix, for the Catherine and Marianne series. 1988, the Prix Littéraire « Louis Barthou » Silver Medal from the Académie Française for Felicia au soleil couchant. 1998, the Chevalier of the National Order of Merit Medal, by Prime Minister Lionel Jospin.