Aside from books that have yet to be released, or ones I've waited until they've ended up in the bargain bin, I can't say I've ever waited as long for a book as this one. Ordered in late July, I now have it in my hands today. Usually I'm impressed by the efficiency of..Amazon but in this case I was truly frustrated by the experience. However, don't let that stop you from purchasing this book!
The first thing I notice about this book is the shape of it - a horizontal rectangle. This presents an aesthetic dilemma as most of the royal books I own are not horizontal rectangles. So where do I place this so as not to disturb the careful visual alignment of books I've created? I'm conflicted, do I put it at the front of the shelf or at the end? Or do I put it on the shelf with smaller books, where it will stick out? Luckily the shape of the book will not affect my enjoyment of it or whether I will give it an unbiased view. The second thing I notice is a DVD which includes 'images set to a soundtrack.' with a '60 minute running time.' This more than makes up for the aesthetic dilemma. I am of course torn between watching this versus giving a deserving review of this book. So I have now decided to look at the book and revisit the DVD later.
Diana A Princess Remembered is filled with photos of Diana throughout her royal career. In that respect it really isn't much different from Diana: Portrait of a Princess by Jayne Fincher (also a horizontal rectangle). Covering official and private travels from 1985 to 1993 to Australia, Brazil, Canada, the Caribbean, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, France, Germany, Hungary, Hong Kong, Korea, Kuwait, India, Indonesia, Italy, Spain, Thailand, the USA and of course the UK. It has a similarity to Portraits of a Princess: Travels with Diana, by Patrick Jephson, which details her travels from an insiders perspective with the relevant photos.
My enjoyment of this book is somewhat marred by Glenn Harvey's reputation as a paparazzi who relentlessly pursued Diana, upsetting her on several occasions for his own cause. However those types of photos are not included in this book, allowing me to believe I have some integrity left after having bought it. Accompanying the book are anecdotes of his travels with Diana and the situations Harvey encountered in order to capture the moment.
The DVD is enjoyable and a pleasant surprise. The musical accompaniment starts sombre but becomes festive depending on the location of the photos. For instance, during her United States visits, the soundtrack section starts with music that belongs more on a game show, complete with wild audience applause. I started to wonder what music would be played in the Canadian part of the DVD - Oh Canada? Bird calls? Aboriginal drumbeats? Instead they decided to stick with acoustic guitar music; the type you'd hear at Starbucks.
If like me, you're on some sort of misguided mission to own every book ever written about Diana, then this book is for you. If not, then you might enjoy the book for what it is - photos of Diana in her royal element, relating to the people and making her extraordinary impact on the world.
© Marilyn Braun 2007
Click here to purchase Diana: A Princess Remembered
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Like royal books? Visit Marilyn's Royal Bookstore!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Contact Form
Featured Post
If being royal is so extraordinary, why do the royals want to be ordinary?
Being royal is clearly not all it is cracked up to be. Gilt here and there. Liveried footmen abound. Church bells ring on your birthday. Red...
Search This Blog
Popular Posts
-
I've written several reviews for this blog but I don't believe I've ever written one about a magazine. Given the amount of inter...
-
I'm all for being a law abiding citizen. It works for me. But when recent news reports trumpeted Kate Middleton with a cell phone in her...
-
Today is a historic day for the monarchy in the Netherlands. Queen Beatrix announced that she would abdicate in favor of her son, Prince Wil...
-
When Princess Charlotte is christened on Sunday July 5th, she will traditionally be given five or six godparents/sponsors. Prince William ha...
-
Ah love.... There is nothing like a royal romance. The pattern is predictable: the media goes into hot-pursuit with intrusive coverage, th...
-
Y'know, I don't have a problem with artwork. As a matter of fact, I go to the museum at least a couple of times a year to make mysel...
-
Whenever any big royal event occurs, I always try to collect the newspapers reporting on them. With the 10th anniversary of the death of Dia...
-
Kate Middleton has recently fronted a website and brochure for a range of princess themed products sold by her parent's company, Party P...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(132)
-
▼
October
(13)
- Is Royalty A Silly Topic For A Blog?
- Is it realistic?
- Upcoming Royal Report - Sunday October 28th
- Introducing The Kate Middleton Report
- Royal Review: The Rick Mercer Report: The Book by ...
- The Royal Report for Sunday October 21, 2007 - The...
- Upcoming Royal Report: Sunday October 21st, 2007
- Question: What is it like being a royal watcher?
- The Diana Inquest - Justice for whom?
- The Royal Report for Sunday October 14, 2007 - Roy...
- The Royal Report: I just called to say...
- Royal Review - Diana, A Princess Remembered by Gle...
- Is the 'Death of Prince Harry' art?
-
▼
October
(13)
10 comments:
A thorough review! Thanks for this. :)
The cover photo is so exquisite, I'd put it on the living room coffee table.
Me again! I tagged you with a writing meme -- here's the link if you want to play: http://elrenaevans.blogspot.com/2007/10/writing-meme.html
I have around 250 books about the royal family of the UK. I'd say over 99% of them are rectangular in shape. There may be a few that are square, but that's all.
Well, correcting my earlier comment...ALL of my royalty books are rectangular since a square is a type of rectangle. *smile*
Janet,
Horizonal rectangle not vertical.
Do you own Diana: Portraits of a Princess by Jayne Fincher or Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra by Peter Kurth? That type of rectangle.
Out of the over 200 books I have, about 4 of them - including this one - are a horizontal rectangle, so for ME it's unusual. The majority of the books I own are vertical rectangles, which I have no problem with on my bookshelf. Anyways, it's not a serious 'asthetic dilemma', it was meant as a joke.
I have the Jayne Fincher book...I made a short stack of royalty books laid horizontally beneath an end-table and "Jayne," being the largest, is on the bottom holding up the others...that's at the moment - I'm one for re-arranging my rooms frequently... :)
Hi Marilyn, You mentioned you wanted suggestions about what to write about. I'd love to know more about you. What's it like being a royal watcher? When did you start? What's been your favorite experience with royal watching? What sort of friendships has it lead to? The thing that differentiates your royal watching from everyone else's is you.
Best wishes,
Jerry Waxler
Memory Writers Network
Nice review. I'm glad to know I'm not the only one thrown when a book isn't the size or shape I'm expecting.
Good, I don't feel so crazy now! ;)
Thanks for your questions Jerry (hardly anyone ever asks about me *sniff*) I'll answer your questions in a future post.
I've only had to lay one or two books horizontally on my shelf - one being Diana: The Portrait by Rosalind Coward. That book is so big it doesn't fit on my shelf vertically!!
Post a Comment