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Unroyal

Three Women Who Shook the Monarchy

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Wallis, Diana and Meghan: Three Wives, One Narrative


One was a married American socialite who embarked on a scandalous affair with the future king of England. Another was an aristocratic ingenue whose winsome charm captured the world's imagination. And the third was a thirty-something actress whose outspokenness put her on a collision course with the British public. The marriages of Wallis Simpson, Diana Spencer, and Meghan Markle into the British royal family sparked a series of crises that at times seemed to threaten the future of the monarchy itself. In Unroyal, veteran New York Times reporter and former London correspondent Sarah Lyall revisits how each royal wife threatened the stability of—and was ultimately rejected by—this most ancient and opaque of institutions. 


Using archival material and interviews with experts like the bestselling author Tina Brown, the royal biographer Andrew Morton, and the social commentator and broadcaster Afua Hirsch, Lyall's audio documentary examines three pivotal TV interviews in which each woman pushed up against the official royal narrative: Wallis in 1970, Diana in 1995, and Meghan in 2021. Lyall describes the differences and highlights the similarities between the women at these three flexion points to examine the endless codependent dance between the monarchy, the public, and the news media and to shed fresh light on the fraught intersection of power, fame, and family politics in an institution torn between tradition and modernization. 


Narrated by the author against a beguiling soundscape of contemporaneous news footage and a spectral score, Unroyal blends the probing inquisition of You're Wrong About with the historical intrigue of The Crown, serving both neophytes and obsessives a delectable royal feast for the ears.

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2024

      In the recent history of the British monarchy, disruption has come most potently not from war or weakness but from women--specifically, Wallis Simpson, Diana Spencer, and Meghan Markle, the famous/infamous wives to princes and kings, whose conspicuous presence (or absence) in the British imagination has posed a threat to the royal status quo. Variously accused of being untraditional, unstable, or uninterested in blending in, each woman sought redemption by tapping into the power of the media. Lyall (The Anglo Files) draws on her extensive experience as a New York Times London correspondent to capture the exuberant, demanding, and frequently disturbing relationship between British royals and the press, up to and including developments in the rocky "post-royal" era of Meghan and Harry. Her focus is on how these women reacted to and were treated by the royal establishment, the public, and the media; she touches only briefly on their biographies, including Simpson's alleged Nazi sympathies. Add in some music and interview clips, and what results is an audio delight narrated by the author, a fast-paced yet thoughtful rendering of three fascinating women who all deserve to be heard anew. VERDICT A richly rendered audiobook offering insight into the experiences of the women who shake (and are shaken by) the power of the Crown. Recommended for followers of British royalty and those seeking feminist cultural studies works.--Robin Chin Roemer

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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