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  • The King is Dead, Long Live the King!

  • Majesty, Mourning and Modernity in Edwardian Britain
  • By: Martin Williams
  • Narrated by: Martin Williams
  • Length: 10 hrs and 52 mins
  • 3.3 out of 5 stars (3 ratings)

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The King is Dead, Long Live the King!

By: Martin Williams
Narrated by: Martin Williams
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Publisher's Summary

The rich and fascinating story of the events surrounding the year 1910 when King Edward VII died, sending shockwaves through Britain and changing the country forever.

Unforgettable as it was, the public response to the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022 was not without precedent. When her great-grandfather King Edward VII - glamorous, cosmopolitan and extraordinarily popular - died in May 1910, the political, social and cultural anxieties of a nation in turmoil were temporarily set aside during a summer of intense and ritualised mourning.

In The King Is Dead, Long Live the King! Martin Williams charts a period of tension and transition as one era slipped away and another took shape. Witnessed by a diverse but interconnected cast of characters - crowned heads and Cabinet ministers, debutantes and suffragettes, artists and murderers - here is the swansong of Edwardian Britain. Set against a backdrop of bereavement and parliamentary crisis overshadowed by the gathering clouds of war, we see a people caught between past and future, tradition and modernity, as they unite to bid farewell to a much-loved monarch who had personified his age.

From Buckingham Palace to Bloomsbury, and from the lying-in-state in Westminster Hall to a now legendary Royal Ascot enveloped in black, this is a vivid evocation of a world on the brink of seismic upheaval.

©2023 Martin Williams (P)2023 Hodder & Stoughton Limited

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Good history lesson

Provides an in site into the historical events that have occurred and shaded the world and our lives

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Unpleasant narration

The book may well be good, although the start sounds like a long rehash of the book about 'Bertie' the Prince of Wales.
The narration is unpleasant. Very very slow and unpleasant accent with the hard 'g's' etc.
Even speeding it up x 4 is not helpful.
I returned the book.

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1 person found this helpful

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