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'The Firm', as the royal family styles itself, judged by real
corporate standards, is a mess. Any consultants called in from
outside to scrutinise its inner workings would find all the
familiar flaws of a family business that has outgrown its original
scale and design. There is no overall strategy, just a collection
of warring divisions pursuing their own ends. And this will be a
profound problem when the Queen dies, because make no bones about
it, the Queen's mortality determines the mortality of the monarchy.
Under Charles III, the monarchy can never be the same; indeed, its
very survival is in doubt. In The Last Queen, pioneering
investigative reporter Clive Irving paints a revelatory portrait of
Elizabeth II's extraordinary reign, setting it within the dramatic
transformation of Britain itself over the same period. Now expanded
to include the death of Prince Philip, the fallout from Megxit and
the banishment of Prince Andrew, this compelling account asks: how
long will the institution survive beyond the second Elizabethan
era?
Unseen behind the throne, two sides of the royal bloodline competed
for influence, and egregious family secrets had to be protected.
Meanwhile, in public, a succession of family ruptures put the
monarchy under unprecedented scrutiny from the world's media. From
the turbulent loves of Princess Margaret to the tragic saga of
Princess Diana, from the torments of Prince Charles to the arrival
of Meghan Markle, tensions gripped the House of Windsor. Through
all this, Elizabeth II remained steadfast in her values while many
of those around her seemed to lose their moorings. Clive Irving's
gripping account casts new light on seventy tempestuous years of
British history, exploring how the Queen, uncomfortable with the
pace of the social and cultural changes in her nation, and often
seeming out of touch, resolutely kept the monarchy stable in a
rapidly changing world. With unparalleled insight, Irving examines
the pivotal events of the Queen's reign and then steps above them
to assess her role in the royal family's Faustian pact with the
media. The final irony is, as Irving's carefully measured scrutiny
shows, that in the last decades of her reign the Queen endures to
become one of the most admired people in the world while remaining
one of the least known and understood. She will likely be the last
Queen of the United Kingdom.
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