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enlarge | Author: Alan Bennett Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $5.95 You Save: $9.05 (60%)
New (32) Used (23) from $2.25
Rating: 82 reviews Sales Rank: 14460
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 128 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0374280967 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914 EAN: 9780374280963 ASIN: 0374280967
Publication Date: September 18, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new.
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| Customer Reviews:
Hilarious! October 20, 2008 Completely charming. God Bless the corgis. I haven't laughed that hard in a long time -- and I'm sending it to a writer friend of mine who, after winning the Commonwealth Prize, recently met Herself!
my review October 12, 2008 totally charming. It makes you think about the joys and benefits of reading while you put yourself in the place of the queen of England and realize what a tedious life she has.
Sheer delight for bibliomaniacs October 5, 2008 A slim volume, this book has lingered in my memory since I first devoured it in London this spring. The subversive power of the written word has rarely been as fancifully and effectively communicated as in this tale of Queen Elizabeth stumbling across a portable library in the grounds of Buckingham Palace while in pursuit of an errant corgi. The monarch is transformed into an avid reader, flummoxing her subjects, her government ministers, her family and her courtiers. Bennett captures the "voice" of the queen herself, even as he deftly outlines the odd position of the constitutional monarchy in today's Britain. Just imagine what could happen if a symbolic head of state, condemned to an eternity of ribbon-cuttings and delivering ceremonial speeches scripted by others discovers literature and a life of ideas? Bennett does -- with aplomb. And his closing paragraphs will leave you gasping and laughing at once -- an admirable twist to this tale. Recommended for all readers -- common and uncommon -- who believe in the importance of books. Click that "buy" button or head for the bookstore, pronto!
Short & sweet... oh, and really funny too!! My MUST read book of the year. September 20, 2008 If you need some brightening up at the end of a dull day, then this is the book to pick up. It's deliciously entertaining and great fun and will take you no more than a couple of hours to read.
'It was the dogs' fault.' The Queen's corgis, sensing an imposter in their garden, go racing around the terrace barking away at what turns out to be the City of Westminster mobile library. The Queen feels compelled to take out a book, choosing an Ivy Compton-Burnett novel, and from here the Queen's interest in literature begins. Her appetite for books becomes insatiable as she works through many different authors, and as her public duties begin to suffer (in the eyes of her private secretary, Sir Kevin), her equerries, under the instruction of Sir Kevin, conspire to bring her literary quest to an end.
Pure unadulterated delight - the perfect booklovers' bedtime companion.
The ruling passion September 9, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
In its own little way Alan Bennett's novella about what might happen if Queen Elizabeth II were to become an avid reader is almost a perfect entertainment. Not much happens in it until the very end, but the pleasure of the work is in how Bennett takes us to his comic denouement very cleverly and unobtrusively. This is really a book meant as a bonbon for people who are themselves great readers, and (particularly) readers of very intelligent (mostly British) novels (the queen's first escapade as a reader is by picking up a copy of an Ivy Compton-Burnett novel, and her new avocation receives impetus when she reads THE PURSUIT OF LOVE and LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE; she continues through Anita Brookner and Henry James and Vikram Seth, with Proust an interesting sidebar for her along the way). There are real lines to treasure, such as the queen's reactions when her subjects tell her about their fondness for Harry Potter (Bennett's imagined queen, we learn, does not care much for fantasy). After the Helen Mirren film THE QUEEN it might seem there is not much left for a writer to do with the figure of Her Majesty, but Bennett very cleverly creates a scenario by which a monarch might capitalize on her very special status among her people to imagine doing something which is both precedented (as she is quick to tell others) but which is still very surprising.
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