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Queen Victoria
Coles
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Queen Victoria in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $21.99


By None
Queen Victoria in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $21.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
"Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey is a masterful biography that reexamines the life and reign of one of Britain's most iconic monarchs. Published in 1921, the book departs from traditional, reverential accounts and instead presents Victoria as a complex and evolving individual shaped by personal passions, political constraints, and emotional transformations. Strachey traces her early years as a sheltered princess, her intense devotion to Prince Albert, and the profound grief that followed his death. The biography highlights the intricate relationship between private emotion and public authority, showing how Victoria's personal experiences influenced her approach to governance and imperial identity. Through elegant prose and psychological insight, Strachey humanizes the Queen without stripping her of historical significance. Rather than celebrating uncritical heroism, Strachey offers a balanced portrait that acknowledges both strength and vulnerability. He captures the shifting dynamics of Victorian society and the monarchy's adaptation to modern constitutional politics. By blending irony, empathy, and historical rigor, Queen Victoria stands as a landmark in modern biographical writing. It reveals the monarch not merely as a symbol of an era, but as a deeply human figure navigating love, loss, duty, and power."
"Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey is a masterful biography that reexamines the life and reign of one of Britain's most iconic monarchs. Published in 1921, the book departs from traditional, reverential accounts and instead presents Victoria as a complex and evolving individual shaped by personal passions, political constraints, and emotional transformations. Strachey traces her early years as a sheltered princess, her intense devotion to Prince Albert, and the profound grief that followed his death. The biography highlights the intricate relationship between private emotion and public authority, showing how Victoria's personal experiences influenced her approach to governance and imperial identity. Through elegant prose and psychological insight, Strachey humanizes the Queen without stripping her of historical significance. Rather than celebrating uncritical heroism, Strachey offers a balanced portrait that acknowledges both strength and vulnerability. He captures the shifting dynamics of Victorian society and the monarchy's adaptation to modern constitutional politics. By blending irony, empathy, and historical rigor, Queen Victoria stands as a landmark in modern biographical writing. It reveals the monarch not merely as a symbol of an era, but as a deeply human figure navigating love, loss, duty, and power."

















