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Robert Hardman - Her Majesty: The Court of Queen Elizabeth II

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Robert Hardman Her Majesty: The Court of Queen Elizabeth II
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The hotly anticipated American edition of Robert Hardmans biography of Queen Elizabeth (formerly Our Queen in the U.K.)An intimate portrait of Englands soon-to-be longest reigning queen, in celebration of her diamond jubileeand the first-ever book interview with her grandson, Prince William.

History has known no monarch like her. She has traveled farther than all her predecessors put together and lived longer than any of them. She has known more historic figures than anyone alivefrom Churchill to Mandela, de Gaulle to Obama.

Now, the distinguished royal writer Robert Hardman has been granted special access to the world of Queen Elizabeth II to produce this enthralling new portrait of one of the most popular pubic figures on earth.

Not only has Elizabeth II reigned through Britains transformation from an imperial power to a multi-cultural nation, but she has also steered the monarchy through more reforms in the last twenty-five years than in the previous century.

Queen Elizabeth II sits at the head of an ancient institution that remains simultaneously popular, regal, inclusive, and relevant in a twenty-first-century world. It is down to neither luck nor longevity: it is down to the shrewd judgment of a thoroughly modern monarchywith no small assistance from the longest-serving consort in history. Here is the inside story.

16 pages of color illustrations

Robert Hardman: author's other books


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HER MAJESTY QUEEN ELIZABETH II AND HER COURT ROBERT HARDMAN PEGASUS - photo 1

HER MAJESTY

QUEEN ELIZABETH II
AND HER COURT

ROBERT HARDMAN

Picture 2
PEGASUS BOOKS
NEW YORK

FOR MY WIFE, DIANA

Simply magnificent. This gripping, fascinating and authoritative tour de force covering the Queen herself, the power and the celebrity of Britains royalty with equal panache gleams with a unique combination of insider anecdotes, deep knowledge, personal experience and superb storytelling by Britains outstanding royal observer.

Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Jerusalem

At long last we have the definitive portrait of Queen Elizabeth IIs world today. Robert Hardman knows the true story and tells it superbly.

Andrew Roberts, author of The Royal House of Windsor

Introduction

Its amazing that she didnt crack

When the world comes to look back on the early twenty-first century, two events in Britain just weeks apart will be lodged in the collective memory. One will be the 2012 London Olympics, a spectacular fortnight of international sporting endeavour. The other will be a celebration of a woman who has become so firmly established on the world stage that, in the words of one Commonwealth leader, she is no longer seen as merely British or, indeed, as merely human. She is the living incarnation of a set of values and a period of history. In Britain, she is Tower Bridge and a red double-decker bus on two legs, not to mention Big Ben, afternoon tea, village ftes and sheep-flecked hills in the pouring rain. In the wider world, she is the newsreel figure who just has carried on going into digital high definition. More than one hundred nations thats more than half the countries on earth did not even exist in their present form when she was crowned. While her presence is taken entirely for granted at home, to millions of people around the planet she represents continuity on a scale bordering on the incomprehensible.

Shes incredible, says Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, during a poignant and thoughtful first interview on someone he describes as my grandmother first and then shes the Queen. No one, surely, is better placed to imagine what it must have been like to succeed to the throne, as the Queen did, at twenty-five. Sitting in his office in St Jamess Palace a few days before his own twenty-ninth birthday, the Prince ponders the enormity of her task: Back then, there was a very different attitude to women. Being a young lady at twenty-five and stepping in to a job which many men thought they could probably do better it must have been very daunting. And I think there was extra pressure for her to perform. He remains in awe of the way she managed it: You see the pictures of her and she looks so incredibly natural in the role. Shes calm, shes poised, shes elegant, shes graceful and shes all the things she needs to be at twenty-five. And you think how loads of twenty-five-year-olds myself, my brother and lots of people included didnt have anything like that. And we didnt have that extra pressure put on us at that age. Its amazing that she didnt crack. She just carried on and kept going. And thats the thing about her. You present a challenge in front of her and shell climb it. And I think that to be doing that for sixty years its incredible.

Only one other monarch has marked sixty years on the throne. Queen Victorias Diamond Jubilee, however, was a celebration of imperial might featuring a rare and somewhat valedictory appearance by a reclusive Britannia figure. The Queen Empress was too lame to make it up the steps into St Pauls Cathedral for her own service of thanksgiving. The clergy processed outside to her carriage instead. After sixty years of Queen Elizabeth II, the mood is entirely different. There is no triumphalism. Instead, the dominant emotion is one of pride in those quiet virtues of service, duty, stability. And the Monarch herself has no trouble with steps of any sort, whether they lead up to cathedrals or aircraft. In 2010, her list of engagements actually rose by almost 20 per cent. The schedule for 2011 including the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, the momentous inaugural state visit to the Republic of Ireland and the state visit by President Barack Obama of the United States all within days of each other would prove busier still.

A jubilee, by definition, is a retrospective occasion. It is an invitation for everyone to view todays world through a sepia-tinted lens. If you compare life now, everything is incomparably better today than when the Queen came to the throne, says former Prime Minister Sir John Major. I hope that will be a theme throughout the celebrations.

But in looking backwards, we run the risk of ignoring the most remarkable aspect of this reign namely the monarchy today. Historians and psychiatrists talk about Queen Victoria syndrome, a capacity to shield oneself away from reality and live in the past. Queen Elizabeth II syndrome is the exact opposite.

The more I have followed the monarchy professionally over two decades, the more I have seen it running counter to all conventional wisdom about family businesses and ancient institutions. This operation has emphatically not become more set in its ways as the management grows older. It has actually changed more in the last twenty-five years than in the previous one hundred and twenty-five. At times through necessity, at times through choice, it has adapted and repositioned itself again and again while the rest of us have barely noticed. The great challenge of this organisation is management of change, says the Duke of York. And thats where the Queen has been so successful. This institution, under her leadership and guidance, has been able to change in a way and at a pace which reflects what is required by society The Queen herself is an extraordinary double act the never changing, ever changing Monarch who happens to be the oldest in history, entering her jubilee year at the age of eighty-five. Yet no one thinks of her as a little old lady in a black dress harrumphing that she is not amused.

We see Queen Victoria in Highland seclusion and set in aspic. We see Queen Elizabeth II walking dogs or watching a dancing display somewhere in the South Seas. She is a now person, not a then person.

That is why this book is not a life story but, instead, a portrait of our Queen today. It is not a chronology but a study of a thoroughly modern monarch. There have been many excellent biographies of the Queen, notably those by Sarah Bradford, Robert Lacey, Elizabeth Longford and Ben Pimlott. In recent years, the picture has also been enhanced by superb biographies of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother by William Shawcross and Hugo Vickers. Equally, Jonathan Dimbleby has produced the definitive work on the Prince of Wales while Basil Boothroyd and Tim Heald have both captured the oceanic contribution of the Duke of Edinburgh to both royal and public life. The volume of work devoted to the tragically short life and times of Diana, Princess of Wales, is a library in itself.

Naturally, I have explored the past to put the present in context and have unearthed old files and fresh material from throughout the Queens six decades on the throne. But what follows is a contemporary inside view of one of the most respected public figures in the modern world. The Queen has never granted an interview and, I dare say, never will. At some point, many years from now and in another reign, an official biographer will be granted access to the diary she writes dutifully every night. Until then, her thoughts will remain, for the most part, off-limits.

But I have been granted special access to those who really know her and those who work and have worked with her. I have spoken to members of the Royal Family, prime ministers, private secretaries, prelates, pages, footmen and friends. I have been able to follow her around the world, around the country and around her own palace at close quarters. The jubilee may be an occasion for all of us to look back over the last sixty years but the star turn will prefer to keep looking ahead. She accepts that her anniversary is a big deal for some. The Lord Chamberlains Office has already declared an amnesty on tat. Normally, we dont allow people to stick the Queens arms on things like mugs, says Deputy Comptroller Jonathan Spencer. But for the jubilee, we are giving them a free-for-all and saying, Go for it. Even so, she will be mildly bemused and faintly embarrassed by all the fuss. History is important to her but the present is rather

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