I know more about Catherine the Great now than when I started the book. I know that she was Empress of Russia, that she liked indoor decorating, gardening, art and architecture that she had lots of lovers (but none of the equestrian variety!), that she didn't think much of her husband or her son, and that she was (relatively) liberal as monarch until the French Revolution changed her mind.
I am also told (although not until the last page of the book's Epilogue,) that she improved the lot of many of her subjects, and that she had pushed Russia up the rankings in European states: and this is the problem with this otherwise entertaining and interesting book, a lack of context.
Catherine's domestic and foreign policies, the condition of the vast majority of the Russian people, from serfs to landlords, are almost completely ignored: subsumed in an increasingly irritating catalogue of balls, masques,interior decorating tips (for those with huge palaces) and lists of favourites, lovers and relatives.
Despite the witty correspondence with Voltaire and others, and the fact that Catherine was clearly a high calibre political operator, Virginia Rounding has portrayed in the end, a rather shallow, selfish isolated, monarch, existing exclusively for her own pleasure.