Lucie de la Tour du Pin had a long life and she was near the centre of events in French Politics for fifty years, and as such, a witness to; revolution, the Napoleonic Empire, and the Restoration of the Bourbons. However, beneath the gloss of political maneuverings, she had great personal tragedy which she forbears with a positive, (if a bit pushy), state of mind. The bald facts of her life would lead to other conclusions - the early death of her mother, an absent father, who remarries and goes abroad, but is then guillotined (along with her father in law),the death of two children by TB, of a son in a duel, and two children in infancy, a husband who makes principled decisions, causing financial ruin and imprisonment, a grand mother - cold and unloving - who brings her up, but steals her fortune and who has an incestuous relationship with her great uncle.
She goes from a world of great excess at the court of Louis XVI, (ie taking forty servants to the country chateaux, to escaping the revolution with almost nothing, only to rise again under Napoleon, but end her life in dreadful poverty.
I enjoyed this book and I learnt a lot about French history, the social manners of the day, and how people lived or travelled before steamships and the railway.
Well written, if a bit dense, with a forrest of characters. It could have done with a more comprehensive list of characters and a detailed family tree. A timeline and a Bourbon family tree would also have helped.
To be recommended as a book which makes history come alive and to stimulate further reading of the period.
Dr Michael Rowlands