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"One of the most fascinating books of the year ... Queen Vic helped invent international tourism - Britain's gift to the world."
Peter
Preston in The Guardian
"Of all the huge outpouring of Victoriana commemorating last month's centenary of the Queen-Empress's death, the most delightful study is this short and very well researched book by the former General Manager of Reuters, Michael Nelson."
It investigates the fully
reciprocated love affair between the Queen and the French Riviera:
she loved the South of France because of the climate, gardens and
relative privacy; it loved her because of the prestige, publicity
and tourism that her nine visits engendered."
Andrew Roberts in The Sunday Telegraph
Gail Benjafield in Library Journal
"This book paints a charming portrait of Victoria and her dealings with officials, statesmen, and the constant stream of visiting crowned heads to the Riviera." Frenchculture.org, French Embassy, Washington
"We see an unexpected side to Victoria: not the imperious, petulant, mourning widow but rather an exuberant, girlish old lady thrilled by her surroundings. There are many fascinating illustrations, some in colour..." Living France
" Queen Victoria’s Riviera Holidays were not only enjoyable for her, they did a great deal of good for the frequently uneasy relations between England and France in the last years of her reign. Surprisingly little has been made of them."Susan Hill in Country Life
"The fascinating story of Queen Victoria’s love affair with the Riviera is beautifully recounted." Ron Kentish in the Isle of Wight County Press
"Vastly researched and highly entertaining."
"She enjoyed the fireworks,
laughed at the local newspapers, and tootled about in a donkey
cart."
"Unwisely, she entertained
King Leopold of the Belgians, a paedophile who spent £800 a month
on little English virgins and wore his fingernails so long that he
daren't shake hands."
Brian Case in Time Out
"As a detailed monograph on one specific aspect of Victoria's life, it is difficult to see how it could have been better done."
"The detail is often beguiling.
Alice de Rothschild ticks the Queen off for treading on her precious
flower-beds and the Household are kept busy retrieving flowers from
the road for the old Queen to shower again at the Battle of the
Flowers."
Paul Minet in Royalty Digest
"...a beautifully produced edition... it is the result of meticulous and much original research. It paints a fascinating portrait of the queen..." Christine Buissson in the Var Village Voice
"A fascinating book, Queen Victoria and the Discovery of the Riviera, published in January 2001, marks the 100th anniversary of Queen Victoria's death. The book, by Michael Nelson, gives an account of her late Majesty's many visits to the Riviera during the last twenty years of her life and even includes journal notes written by her at the time." The Traveller in France 2001
"...an enjoyable portrait of one of the modern era's most important monarchs." Publishers Weekly
"...there is no lack of diverting sidelights. On her first visit, the Queen's train lacked a restaurant car, and she brought some of the food from Windsor, rather like a tripper taking sandwiches to Paris." E.S.Turner in the Times Literary Supplement
"'We are not amused' became her most celebrated remark because it seemed to sum up her attitude to life... But was that the real Victoria? In this 100th anniversary year of her death, new revelations about Queen Victoria's holidays on the French Riviera have emerged, and they show her in a quite different light. They also explain how a strip of Mediterranean France became, with her patronage, one of the most fashionable and glamorous resorts in the world." Christopher Hudson in the Daily Mail
"...... a well-researched and highly readable account of the sovereign's love affair with the South of France." Patrick Middleton in The Riviera Reporter
"Michael Nelson, a former Reuters
executive, uses all his old reporting skills to trawl the Royal
archives at Windsor in search of the quite untold story of the queen
who took the train through Nice and Cannes to escape the English
winter. There, in this enclave of Englishness, the crowned heads of
Europe gathered and rested and fell in love. It's a fascinating tale,
gently and studiously told."
Peter Preston in the Good Books Guide
Books of the Year 2001.
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Kaiser
Wilhelm II telling his grandmother the Queen not to cry any more, but to
count on him. He is concealing from her a telegram ordering warships to
Lourenço Marques, maritime gateway to the Transvaal. At the time of the
Jameson Raid at the end of 1895 British residents in Johannesburg were at
odds with the Boer Government. French postcard by Frévil. Author's collection. Click here to enlarge the image.
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