Between Crown and Chisel: The Princess Who Wouldn’t Yield Her Dream

Between Crown and Chisel: The Princess Who Wouldn’t Yield Her Dream

Imagine you’re from a wealthy English family, coming of age in the second half of the 1800s, an independent female thinker, a supporter of women’s rights, and a sculptor.

How could you live out your identity if you were Princess Louise, daughter of the domineering, grief-obsessed Queen Victoria?

In the Shadow of a Queen, by Heather B. Moore, cover image

Heather B. Moore answers this question in her recent historical novel, In the Shadow of a Queen, based on her research into the life of Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.

The novel begins when Louise is twelve, includes her father’s death and many scenes of her interactions with family members and friends, revealing the unique personality of each individual. The author doesn’t shy away from conflicts, and she closes the story with Louise’s decision of what would be her life’s project.

 

Characters:

Princess Louise—fourth daughter and sixth child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, a talented sculptor and independent thinker who chafed at her mother’s off-the-cuff dictums

Queen Victoria—a forceful personality who bonded so strongly with her husband, Prince Albert, that she depended to an unhealthy degree on her daughters, changed her mind frequently, and never recovered from Albert’s death

John Campbell, Marquess of Lorne—Scottish suitor of Louise, a commoner considered after no attractive royal options materialized

Sybil Grey—Louise’s loyal friend, daughter of General Grey, the queen’s loyal aide

Albert Edward (Bertie), Prince of Wales—Victoria’s oldest son, heir to the throne; a sympathetic older brother to Louise as she grows up, despite his moral lapses

Louise’s other brothers: Alfred, Arthur, Leopold (Leo)

Louise’s sisters: Victoria (Vicky), Alice, Helena, Beatrice

Strengths:

In the Shadow of a Queen captures the personalities of each member of the Victorian English Royal Family, as well as others. In particular, the author shows the pressures Queen Victoria exerted on Princess Louise (and her other children), and how Louise dealt with them.

 

Weakness:

The story reads more like a biography than a novel, because indeed, it’s a lightly-fictionalized biography.

 

Content review:

This novel reveals the character weaknesses of the royal family, including smoking, class discrimination, and adultery (all common in the era).

 

My recommendation:

I found this novel entertaining and educational. If you enjoy books that neither romanticize nor scandalize the lives of royals, In the Shadow of a Queen will give you an opportunity to get to know Princess Louise and reflect on her life, dreams, and achievements.

 

Reader, can you suggest favorite novels about royal families?

When Exceptional Art Meets Everyday People

When Exceptional Art Meets Everyday People

Have you ever encountered art, literature, or music that impacted you in a way you can’t forget?

This month, we discuss a historical novel about a painting that altered several lives, and a work of history in which opera changed two ordinary lives, which in turn saved numerous lives.

But first: join me and three other historical novelists on October 17th on Zoom for “Women Breaking the Rules: Heroines in Historical Fiction.” To join us for the discussion, sign up (no charge) at:

Now to the reviews:

Girl in Hyacinth Blue, by Susan Vreeland, cover image

How can a novel about a painting keep you turning the pages?

Susan Vreeland, author of Girl in Hyacinth Blue, pulls this off with 8 chapters that work on their own as short stories, but leave readers wanting more.

With its focus on a Dutch painting, this novel (published in 1999) explores the artwork’s origins, the paths it traveled over the centuries, and its impact on individuals who possessed it.

Girl in Hyacinth Blue has likely served as a model for authors of more recent novels with through lines consisting of objects (especially of art) rather than individual people.

Characters:

Beginning with the painting’s most recent owner, going back in time to the girl the artist portrayed, the author reveals the core of each personality through his or her relationship with the painting.

I would spoil the story if I mentioned the relationship of each character to the novel as a whole. So, while I must avoid comments about specific characters, I can mention the topics these stories bring up:

  • The position of girls and women in earlier times
  • Artists’ economically vulnerable professions
  • Calamitous floods in the Netherlands
  • Execution of “witches”
  • The “Middle Passage” slave trade
  • Nazi looting of art treasures owned by Jews

Above all, the individual stories show how the painting at the heart of this novel revealed or changed the character of each owner.

Strengths:

  • The author’s creative connection of the stories is part of the wonder of this novel.
  • She uses key details to create a distinct setting for each of the 8 stories.
  • In a brief space, she develops each character and his/her relationship to the painting.

Weakness:

  • If a reader hopes for a single set of characters throughout the novel, s/he won’t find it in this novel.

Content review:

  • The novel contains references to physical intimacy, but not extensively throughout the novel.

My Recommendation:

Although this novel isn’t lengthy, it covers much ground. If evocative, well-written stories combining a painting, people, and their times interest you, you’ll enjoy Girl in Hyacinth Blue.

Overture of Hope, by Isabel Vincent, cover image

I love to read about ordinary people doing extraordinary things, especially when the stories are true—and I hope you do, too.

In Overture of Hope, two unassuming British sisters show their courage and heroism during World War II, venturing into Nazi territory to rescue Jewish opera stars facing extermination.

Author Isabel Vincent reveals the true story of how in the 1920s, Ida and Louise developed a passion for opera by listening to vinyl records, and she shows where that led them.  They loved to attend live opera so much they took brown-bag lunches to work and saved their meager salaries to buy tickets (standing in line for discounts, of course) to operas in London.

Ida, the outgoing younger sister, took the lead in reaching out to visiting opera stars, such as Amelita Galli-Curci. Bold correspondence led to fan relationships with luminaries. By the time Hitler came to power, the sisters had established friendships with several stars and often conversed with them backstage when they came to London.

Among their operatic friends, Austrian conductor Clemens Krauss and his wife, soprano Viorica Ursuleac, became controversial because of their collaboration with Hitler. At the same time, they enlisted the aid of Ida and Louise to help Jewish opera singers escape from Nazi-occupied lands.

Ida’s success as a romance novelist enabled the sisters to travel as opera tourists who often arranged singers’ and families’ escapes, as well as smuggling out the priceless jewelry of the Jewish people they assisted.

Characters:

They are shown as the very human individuals they were—even the heroines weren’t perfect.

  • Ida – years into adult life, she found success as a romance novelist. Later in life, she enjoyed recounting the stories of what she did in the war
  • Louise – quiet, shy, she lived in her younger sister’s shadow the majority of her life

Strengths:

Exciting plot, well-researched

Weakness:

Sometimes a bit more repetition of facts than readers need

Content review:

Includes accounts of Nazi persecution and acts of cruelty, although not in graphic detail

My Recommendation:

If you enjoy a heroic story involving characters from the world of opera, and you’d like to learn more about what happened in the opera world during the war, this is a book for you.

Reader, what works of art, literature, or music have changed your life?