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The Crown: The official book of the hit Netflix series

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In 2008, the Doubleday Business/Currency, Doubleday Religion, and WaterBrook Multnomah divisions were moved from Doubleday to Crown when Doubleday was merged with Knopf. [17] Doubleday Religion was replaced with the Catholic imprint Image in 2011. [18] The Crown is a fascinating miniseries--but it *is* fictionalized and dramatized. And therein lies the practical beauty of this book: as a companion piece to the miniseries, it does a fine job of pointing out the differences between the actual history and the dramatic retelling. It’s very difficult to put into words the depth and feeling in this novel. The scope is far-reaching and the relationships are complex, and I found it extremely absorbing. At times I found the writing a bit heavy-handed, in particular when Scott delved into more detailed military and political history; therefore I can’t quite give this 5 stars. There were several scenes that left me speechless – their intensity being so moving. There is no denying the masterful writing of this author and I intend to read the entire Raj quartet eventually. Recommended to those that enjoy classic and historical fiction, multiple viewpoints, and complex narratives. 4 stars.

The Crown by Emily Kapff | Waterstones

Just like the series on Netflix, this book primarily focuses on the first three years after Elizabeth II's ascension, covering her coronation, the scandal of her sister's love affair with divorcee Peter Townsend, the decline of Winston Churchill, and so much more. This volume is filled with historical photographs as well as stills from the show. All the major players are given a biographical sketch, if not entire sections devoted to who they were and how their lives interacted with the Queen and the royal family. It's highly informative and yet easy to read, especially for devoted history fans. Really a beautiful book; really tough one thoough. Incredibly written: UN-english like: almost no dialogues, long long sentences (12/15/20 lines without a fullstop!), more hypotaxis than parataxis. It says "This is the story of a rape, of the events that led up to it and followed it and of the place in which it happened. There are the action, the people, and the place, all of which are interrelated but in their totality incommunicable in isolation from the moral continuum of human affairs.". But it's much more than this. It's the articulated telling of the socalled "partition", but seen from different point of view. Looking into several different aspects, language included! Highly recomended Truly excellent historical novels capture the history of a time and place through human interactions. History is made by human beings going about their business, with all their failings, prejudices and strivings. This novel is one of the better ones I've ever read in helping to understand India under British rule, The Raj. It not only tells us what, but how, and even more importantly, why. This is the first book of a quartet, and I have no doubt that when I finish the fourth one, I can claim it is the "War and Peace" of India.

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It is 1942, and Gandhi has delivered the ultimatum to the British - "Quit India!" - in his quietly arrogant way. Everywhere, the winds of change are felt, as the worm is finally turning. In this chaotic situation, a British woman is raped by Indians-and all hell breaks loose. “The Bibighar Incident”, as it comes to be known, grows into a metaphor: the beginning of the end of the British Raj. Eitan Eats the World by Eitan Bernath: 9780593235362 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books". PenguinRandomhouse.com . Retrieved May 19, 2022.

The Crown - Penguin Random House

The central metaphor is the parting gift, the semi-allegorical and semi-historical picture, “The Jewel in Her Crown”, given to Miss Crane when she transferred from Muzzfirabad to Mayapore: After reading this book, I understand that season 1 of The Crown covered the years 1947-1955 in Queen Elizabeth’s life. There were 10 episodes, and each gets a chapter in this book.

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joint venture with Leonine Holding, The Walt Disney Company, Bauer Media Group and Hubert Burda Media. The compulsory subscription was waived in the case of all but regular officers and two new types of membership were introduced. Officers with temporary or emergency commissions could enjoy either what was called Special membership, which involved paying the subscription and was meant of course to attract well-brought-up officers who could be assumed to know how to behave, or Privileged Temporary Membership which entitled the privileged temporary member to use the club's facilities on certain specific days of the week but which could be withdrawn without notice. One thing in this book that also really interested and astounded me was the information about Elizabeth’s sister, Margaret. While Elizabeth’s story focuses on the duty and strength it takes to be a Queen her sister’s story is much more scandalous. Princess Margaret (played by the beautiful Vanessa Kirby) fell in love when she was young with a man sixteen years older than her, Peter Townsend. Sadly, he had already married before their romance and marrying a person that had been divorced was strictly against the rules so despite their best attempts to change the system it ended in broken hearts. For this, I totally felt for her throughout the show because she seemed like such a lovely woman despite being a little flighty and immature so I was very surprised to read about how people thought even less of her in real life basically as a bratty, party girl. It’s not surprising that a young person in her position might act that way but I always had the idea that everyone adored all of the royal family so I’m now fuelled to learn more about Margaret and the truth of her eventful life. Her section of the book was totally riveting and I’m looking forward to following her history as well as Elizabeth if there’s another companion for the second season because this was truly a delight to read! If agape is selfless love, a passion committed to the other, then that is how I felt at the end of The Jewel in the Crown.

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The book quotes a letter from a young Elizabeth to her parents: “Darling Mummy, I don’t know where to begin this letter, or what to say, but I know I must write it somehow because I feel so much about it … I think I’ve got the best mother and father in the world, and I only hope that I can bring up my children in the happy atmosphere of love and fairness which Margaret and I have grown up in.” Reading this, I had to wonder how things went so wrong with the Queen’s children, all four of whom have seemed to struggle with life and relationships to some degree or other. And Elizabeth and Philip have never been known as nurturing parents. There is a salvation of a kind for a boy like him. He is the leftover, the loose end of our reign, the kind of person we created -I suppose for the best intentions... I realised how much easier it was to talk to another English woman, even if you disagreed with everything she said. People of the same nationality use a kind of shorthand in conversation, don’t they? You spend less effort to express moreUnder the direction of Wartels, [4] Alan Mirken, [11] Joseph Reiner [12] and others, Crown Books became one of the Outlet Book Company's lead imprints for original publishing which included such landmark fiction and non-fiction as Judith Krantz's Princess Daisy, Jean M. Auel's The Clan of the Cave Bear and Alex Comfort's The Joy of Sex in its early high-profile years. I too felt the pull. Teaching in an inner city school I was surrounded by children from many different cultures, the greatest group by far being those from Bangladesh, a country only formed in 1947, when India and Pakistan were partitioned. Bangladesh or East Pakistan was separate from the rest of Pakistan (West Pakistan), and the children I taught from these 3 countries were all very different from each other. In fact the children were also from different parts of India, from the Northern parts right down to Tamil Nadu and Sri Lanka (which used to be called Ceylon when under Colonial rule). My colleagues variously went off to explore, hoping to find work locally and having verbal invitations galore from the families of the children we taught, to stay with them and share their lives. Work was easy to come by, provided one was happy to live the simple life, and this was a time when “aspirations” were more to do with experiencing variety, freedom of thought and options than acquisitiveness. Assimilating wealth was decidedly uncool. But we've got far beyond that stage of colonial simplicity. We've created a blundering judicial robot. We can't stop it working... We created it to prove how fair, how civilised we are. But it is a white robot and it can't distinguish between love and rape. It is clear that the human relationships are portrayed only to demonstrate a far larger political concern. In fact, just as in E.M. Forster’s earlier masterpiece, “A Passage to India”, the characters can be seen as a metaphor for the entire novel. In many ways, The Jewel in the Crown seems like its natural successor, even to its mirroring the Adela/Aziz affair. Jewel in the Crown' is a very circular narrative, at times very stream of consciousness, most of the novel is told throw interviews of secondary characters, but I like how this gives a large physiological scope, the Kipling like army officer, the well meaning missionary, the radical, the saint, and the upper class Indian.

The Crown by Robert Lacey | Waterstones

Have you seen the Netflix show The Crown? They have done a stunning job bringing to life the beginning of Queen Elizabeth II's reign. If you, like me, have watched the show and wondered where they blurred the lines between fact and fiction, this is a book you'll be wanting to read. Written by royal biographer and show historian Robert Lacey, this official companion feels authoritative and thorough as it digs into each episode and the history behind it. It’s 1942 and tensions are running high in India. Britain, with its usual high-handedness, has decided that Indian troops will join the war effort without consulting the Indian leaders. Gandhi is demanding that the British quit India, even though that will probably mean that the Japanese move in. When the British arrest the leaders of the Independence movement, for a few short days the peace of Mayapore is broken as rioters take to the streets. And in that time one British woman will see her idealistic dreams destroyed while another will be brutally raped. Eighteen years later, an unnamed researcher will come to Mayapore to try to discover the truth of what happened in those days. Crown Books Corporation History", International Directory of Company Histories Volume 21, St. James Press, 1998 Crown Books Files Consensual Plan of Reorganization" [ permanent dead link], Crown Books Press Release, July 1, 1999There are two stories here, one within the other. The inner story is of a young Englishwoman named Daphne who immerses herself in India and the flow of history during the volatile period of 1942. The larger story is of the relationship between the colonizer and its subject, both yearning for India's freedom, yet unable to get it done. The Jewel in the Crown is a long novel, focusing on the rising power struggle in India. The tensions between the Indian population of the fictitious town of Mayapore, and the British civil and military authorities are high. Not only is British rule beginning to waver, and be considered as inappropriate even by some of the British themselves, but there are complex additional tensions, due to political, racial and religious differences.

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