King George V predicted that his eldest son, Edward VIII, would destroy himself within a
year of succeeding to the throne. In December 1936 he was proved right, and the
world’s press broke their Great Silence: King Edward VIII was abandoning his throne to
marry Wallis Simpson, a divorced American socialite.
A life spent in the shadow of his charismatic elder brother left the new king, George VI,
magnificently unprepared for the demands of ruling the kingdom and empire; this would
be a baptism of fire. Hitler’s Third Reich was tearing up the old Kingdoms of Europe one
by one, and the familiar contours of London were being transformed by sandbags. As
Great Britain braced herself for war, the faltering new king struggled to manage internal
divisions within the royal family and feared betrayal as intelligence mounted of the Duke
and Duchess of Windsors’ suspected treachery during the worst days of the war.
Drawing on personal accounts from the royal archives and other new sources, Deborah
Cadbury goes behind palace doors to uncover the very private conflict between George
VI and his too charming older brother; a conflict so bitter it was unresolvable while they
were both alive.
Cadbury’s intimate and gripping account of familial tensions amongst kings and
princes, provides a unique look at one of the most turbulent periods in British history.
Overcoming his stammer was only the beginning, and Cadbury goes on to reveal just
what it took for George VI to rise to the challenge of leading his country during its time of
greatest peril – and at what price. Ingenaaide editie, in het Engels, 432 pagina's, afmeting 15x23 cm.