Publisher's
Weekly Review
Each month Publisher's Weekly editors
pick the books they feel are exceptional. Today 'Publisher's Weekly'
presents the editor's picks of nonfiction for July:
When kings marry foreign strangers for dynastic
or financial reasons and queens are trained in piety over sensuality,
royal mistresses seem an inevitability. Kings had flings and extramarital
relationships through much of European history, and in her first book,
Herman offers with relish and dry wit a delightful overview of their
sexual escapades. Her subjects are international, though France dominates
and England gets a strong showing. It's a lively account, organized
by topic, e.g., "The Fruits of Sin-Royal Bastards"). Herman
weaves into a larger pattern the tales of recurrent figures, such
as Louis XIV's mistress Athénaïs de Montespan and Madame
de Pompadour, who is perhaps more famous than her royal lover, Louis
XV. Fashions, love potions and cheerful conversation kept kings enthralled
while mistresses made themselves wealthy, husbands acquiesced or simmered,
courtiers wooed the mistresses and the public admired or ridiculed.
A striking number of these relationships continued despite arguments
and even the lack of sex. George II even felt it necessary to keep
a mistress for his reputation despite actually loving his wife. Herman
ends on a modern note, recounting how Camilla Parker-Bowles famously
introduced herself to Prince Charles by noting that her great-grandmother
had been his great great-grandfather's mistress. Herman ends on a
serious note, but her wit and perceptiveness will carry readers through
this royally pleasurable romp.
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