Marie Antoinette is a widely known historical personnage - infamous for her callousness towards the starving peasants ("Let them eat cake!") and for having her head chopped off during the French Revolution, a victim of the guillotine, yet few attempts have ever been made to go beyond the stereotypes ... Read review
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of F...
Postage & Packaging: £2.75 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Marie Antoinette, Antonia Fraser's first book in five years, heralds the welcome return of ... more
her wonderfully lucid, engaging style as she disentangles myth from fact regarding the life of the still controversial, and misunderstood, wife of Louis XVI of France. It is also perhaps her most assured work to date. The daughter of Empress Maria Teresa of Austria, the 14-year-old Marie Antoinette, or l'Autrichienne, was sent to France to marry the Dauphin in 1770 in an act of political union between the two countries. Despite her husband's preference for the hunting field over the bedroom, and a somewhat inexpressive personality--his final terse diary entry was to be, appropriately, "Rien"--a decade of French courtly exuberance entailed. Her disappointment in marriage gave way to an enjoyment of her position, especially on turning 30, yet an increasing number of libelles and scandalous rumours about the new Queen and her sexual proclivities grew from Versailles' whispers to the shouts of what was to be the revolution of 1789. This was followed by her own awful demise and beheading four wretched years later, after the appalling torture of her own young son falsely testifying that he had been sexually abused by her. Those are the skeletal facts of her life, but Fraser fleshes out the story with her customary composed authority. Her stated ambition is twofold. The book's subtitle, "The Journey", refers to Marie Antoinette's political significance in a union over which she had no control, but also her own personal story, from the ill-educated, overwhelmed teenage bride to the despised monarch who bore the brunt of all the ills of the ancien régime. Fraser, arch debunker, necessarily removes the apocryphal--Mozart the child prodigy saying that he would marry her, the infamous "let them eat cake" comment that preceded her by several hundred years, dressing as a milkmaid at her model village in the grounds of Versailles--to reveal a woman whose misfortunes, she concludes, outweighed her failures. Like the Jemima Shore detective novels she also pens, Fraser displays an unerring ability to ask the right questions. Most of all, though, she writes with an understated, unadorned clarity that imparts her learning with an ease to be both envied and savoured. In 1789, Marie Antoinette famously said to a deputation from the Commune of Paris, "I've seen everything, known everything, and forgotten everything". There could be no wiser, compassionate and judicious reclaimer of her besmirched reputation than Antonia Fraser.--David Vincent
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Advantages: Very readable, interesting, informative Disadvantages: Sometimes lacking in detail, descriptions of executions
Marie Antoinette is a widely known historical personnage - infamous for her callousness towards the starving peasants ("Let them eat cake!") and for having her head chopped off during the French Revolution, a victim of the guillotine, yet few attempts have ever been made to go beyond the stereotypes and actually investigate the character of this celebrity queen.
Noted historian Antonia Fraser aims to correct this, and has ... ...reputed sexual insatiability (in truth Marie was quite sexually inexperienced even after marriage and quite pious as well, the allegations deeply upset and shocked her), and of her legendary arrogance, spending inordinate sums of money even as the people of France starved (while she did spend lavishly, even the Royal Family trimmed their expenses in the time of need!)
My main criticism is that in its focus of Marie Antoinette alone, ... more
Marie Antoinette is a widely known historical personnage - infamous for her callousness towards the starving peasants ("Let them eat cake!") and for having her head chopped off during the French Revolution, a victim of the guillotine, yet few attempts have ever been made to go beyond the stereotypes and actually investigate the character of this celebrity queen.
Noted historian Antonia Fraser aims to correct this, and has largely succeeded in a very sympathetic biography of the Queen that not only defeats the popular misconceptions surrounding the Queen's character but draws upon an extensive array of historical sources (including a dazzling number of primary sources) to create a complete picture of who this woman actually was. Fraser's second purpose is to trace the evolution of the Queen, from shy and inexperienced Princess to mature Queen to humbled victim of the French Revolution, and it is indeed remarkable to witness her transformation.
By far the best aspect of this biography is the intimate portrait it gives of the Queen, a largely misunderstood person. Fraser begins with a description of Marie's life before France, in the court of her powerful mother, Austrian Empress Maria Theresa, a formidable, and as we learn, often contradictory force in her daughter's life. Throughout the book, Fraser demonstrates keen psychological analysis as she interprets the effects of an overbearing mother, an insecure and impotent husband, and the nastiness of court and public opinion on Marie's personality.
Fraser also sets out to rubbish the many rumors that history has saddled Marie's name with - namely the reports of her reputed sexual insatiability (in truth Marie was quite sexually inexperienced even after marriage and quite pious as well, the allegations deeply upset and shocked her), and of her legendary arrogance, spending inordinate sums of money even as the people of France starved (while she did spend lavishly, even the Royal Family trimmed their expenses in the time of need!)
My main criticism is that in its focus of Marie Antoinette alone, the book fails to completely place events in her personal life against the backdrop of the unfolding Revolution and does not present a clear enough explanation as to how the Queen turned from beloved monarch to such a reviled figure. Fraser periodically references the popular press of the day and the falsely salacious details of Marie Antoinette's insatiable sexual appetites but makes little effort to explain why these reports sprung up in the first place. To pin it solely on the Queen's Austrian ancestry (as the book suggests in more than one place) is to provide an incomplete explanation. Fraser's attempt may have been to chart the evolution of the Queen as an individual, but given the gruesome outcome that Marie Antoinette met with, I would think that charting the popular evolution of sentiment towards her would be equally important and I would have expected as much from a scholar of Fraser's ability.
Nevertheless, the book remains a fascinating glimpse not only into the character and life of Marie Antoinette, but into another age, one of lavish courts, elaborate daily rituals and strict etiquette that had to be maintained at any price. More importantly, the book reveals the human figures behind the grand historical personages, and though a highly sympathetic retelling of events, does a decent job of explaining the rationale behind the fated Queen's behavior (even if, at times, it seems as though Fraser is making excuses for her).
The book is rich in factual information yet avoids becoming too heavy or mired in history. The writing is extremely good - clear, concise and informative (yet without being dry either), and is an excellent book to read when you don't have the time to dive head-first into a deeply complex and lengthy tome. I highly recommend it.
Advantages: A compelling story about an amazing woman. Disadvantages: A tad depressing!
...through the extraordinary life of Marie Antoinette from her childhood as an Archduchess of Austria through to her execution in 1793. Her story is told in chronological order but each chapter is still based around a theme so it doesn’t read like a boring textbook. The beginning of the book covers the happier times in Marie Antoinette’s life – her contented childhood in Austria as the daughter of the formidable Empress Maria Theresa, ... ...had nothing to do with. Marie Antoinette tried in vain to improve her public image but she was further tarnished by the ‘Diamond Necklace Affair’ in which she was totally innocent. Although she made did make mistakes external circumstances such as severe economic problems and the revolutionary world climate coupled with the misfortune of having a weak and indecisive husband were to blame for the revolution not her. A warning for those ...
Tricia24 29.10.2003
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Advantages: Well Written, A Great Story of the Life of Marie Antoinette Disadvantages: Can be Quiet Complex in Places, Gets Confusing with the Politics and Names
If you enjoyed the film and was curious to find out more about the fascinating life of one of the last and most legendary Queen of France then this book has it all.
I have read many books on MarieAntoinette from her life, her fashion and even fictional interpretations of her, but this book has the facts, gory intimate details and makes sense of the many rumors that surrounded the teenage Queens life from her famous line "Let Them Eat Cake" to her wild love affairs within the French court.
This book portrays the true aspects of the lonely life that Marie was subject to at Versailles, coming from Austria into a scrupulous French Court, with an unloving husband at the age of 14 and to become queen before 20 she lead a life that she was ill prepared for. She compensated this through her passions of gambling, late night parties ...