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My book of the year which trounced the rest of the competition as soon as I started to read it, is Magnificent Obsession; Victoria, Albert and the Death that Changed the Monarchy by Helen Rappaport.

At the end of my review of Charles Dickens by Claire Tomalin I was positive that this would be my choice as I could not envisage another book coming along which could beat it.  Well, two weeks later I read Helen's simply terrific book and changed my mind immediately and here is my review.

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When Albert died Victoria wanted to die, indeed she assumed she would as she could not imagine living without her beloved husband.  She retreated into widowhood and mourning and waited. It may sound acontradictory thing to say but I feel she kept going because she was expecting that it wouldn't be for long and she would be reunited with Albert.  But the years passed and the reader can feel her desolation and grief and I wondered how she must have felt when she realised that she wasn't going to die, she was going to live and she had to continue without him. Her misery must have been overwhelming. How was she to cope?

As with Ekaterinburg, which I read a couple of years ago and reviewed here, Helen has the knack of making you so involved with the feelings and emotions of her subject, be it Romanovs or Coburgs, that their sorrows become yours. I cried when I read Ekaterinburg and I had a sniff or two when I read Magnificent Obsession. Not many authors can write in such a scholarly and readable manner and make you cry at the same time, but this one does.

I have loved this period of history and Victoria and Albert since reading Elizabeth Longford's landmark biography of Queen Victoria back in 1964.  That was the book that started it all off. Since then I have read many biographies and histories of the Queen, the Prince Consort, their letters, their children's lives and find them as fascinating today as I did then.

Helen Rappaport has written a wonderful book and I am delighted to choose it as my Book of the Year. 

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7 responses to “Magnificent Obsession – Random’s Book of the Year 2011”

  1. Elaine Simpson-Long Avatar

    Oh Mary I am so pleased to hear that and do hope you get a chance to read it as well. Thank you for letting me know

  2. Mary Jenkins Avatar

    Totally on your recommendation I rushed an order to Amazon for “Magnificent Obsession” as an extra present for my friend – she is loving it! Maybe I will get a chance to read it later! Thank you!

  3. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    Having read Beautiful Forever and No Place for a Lady, this is already on my library list as I’m afraid that hardbacks are out of my budget .
    I hope that you and your family all have a Very Merry Christmas and a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year.

  4. Elaine Simpson-Long Avatar

    Nicola – I remember seeing these books on the library shelves at HIghgate when I was a lowly assistant. Never read them perhaps I should now seek them out. OK so off you go and buy this book NOW
    Lisa – it is a simply gorgeous book, so well written and compelling. Look forward to hearing what youthink of it
    Claire – I trust you are now hotfooting it off to the nearest bookshop to buy it??

  5. Claire (The Captive Reader) Avatar

    The more I read about this book, the more excited I am to get my hands on a copy!

  6. Bluestalking Avatar

    Lovely! I just received this one to review for ‘Library Journal’ and ran around madly in complete glee when I pulled it out of the package! I CANNOT WAIT.
    So exciting to hear this was your Book of 2011. Can’t tell you how much that adds to my happiness!

  7. Nicola Slade Avatar

    I ‘discovered’ Victoria and Albert when I was about 12 and first read the trilogy beginning with ‘And So Victoria’ by Vaughan Wilkins, an historical novelist with a very jaded view of the Hanoverian kings! So ‘Magnificent Obsession’ shall be mine – I’ve got a book token and I’m not afraid to use it!

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