Catherine Reef is the author of more than 40 nonfiction books, including many highly acclaimed biographies for young people. She lives in College Park, Maryland. Visit her online at catherinereef.com.
Victoria: Portrait of a Queen
eBook
$9.99
-
ISBN-13:
9780544715950
- Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Publication date: 11/07/2017
- Sold by: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 208
- File size: 34 MB
- Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
- Age Range: 12 - 18 Years
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
- Share
- LendMe LendMe™ Learn More
9.99
In Stock
Catherine Reef brings history vividly to life in this sumptuously illustrated account of a confident, strong-minded, and influential woman.
Victoria woke one morning at the age of eighteen to discover that her uncle had died and she was now queen. She went on to rule for sixty-three years, with an influence so far-reaching that the decades of her reign now bear her name—the Victorian period. Victoria is filled with the exciting comings and goings of royal life: intrigue and innuendo, scheming advisors, and assassination attempts, not to mention plenty of passion and discord. Includes bibliography, notes, British royal family tree, index.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton and…
- by Penny Colman
-
- Jane Austen: A Life Revealed
- by Catherine Reef
-
- Very, Very, Very Dreadful: The…
- by Albert Marrin
-
- With Their Eyes: September…
- by Annie Thoms
-
- The Big Book of Sides: More…
- by Rick Rodgers
-
- Pocahontas
- by Joseph Bruchac
-
- Real Food: What to Eat and Why
- by Nina Planck
-
- Wedding Bell Blues
- by Meg Benjamin
-
- Famous Nathan: A Family Saga…
- by Lloyd HandwerkerGil Reavill
-
- Little Old Lady Recipes:…
- by Meg FavreauMichael E. Reali
-
- Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12…
- by Malorie BlackmanHolly BlackNeil GaimanDerek LandyCharlie HigsonAlex ScarrowRichelle MeadPatrick NessPhilip ReeveMarcus SedgwickMichael ScottEoin Colfer
-
- Isabella of Castile:…
- by Giles Tremlett
-
- The Unwanted: Stories of the…
- by Don Brown
-
- Max Factor: The Man Who…
- by Fred E. Basten
-
- All the Stars Denied
- by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
Recently Viewed
From the Publisher
★ "A biography fit for a queen." —Kirkus, starred review "For history buffs and fans of historical fiction, this biography allows readers to immerse themselves in 19th-century voices and aesthetics." –School Library Journal "Reef’s storytelling is impeccably paced, covering Victoria’s eighty-plus years with ease and assurance... This will be a valuable companion for lovers of Victorian period fiction and a satisfying read for biography fans." –Bulletin "Eminently readable with lavish illustrations and photographs, Victoria: Portrait of a Queen is an engrossing biography of the woman for whom the nineteenth century was named the Victorian Age. Readers will come away with a personal connection to what Lord Salisbury meant when he said, “She has been a great instance of government by example, by esteem, by love.” —VOYA "Full of color portraits, period engravings, and fascinating photographs of the queen, her consort, and her progeny, this endeavor is made to pore over again and again... Anglophiles and history lovers should definitely enjoy this." —Booklist "Full of primary source material and spectacular paintings in full color as well as back matter that includes a Windsor family tree, source notes, and a rich bibliography, this is a biography for Victoriana and history lovers alike."Horn BookSchool Library Journal
09/01/2017Gr 6 Up—This intimate portrait of Queen Victoria simultaneously provides a panorama of the 19th century's great cultural, political, and technological upheaval. Victoria's life is novelistic in scope, and Reef deftly integrates primary sources. Speaking through her diaries and letters, the young Victoria engages readers in her passionate struggle for self-determination. As an older queen, her stormy opposition to the reforming Prime Minister Gladstone provides ample drama. Balancing Victoria's voice, her family, prime ministers, and the British public, Reef offers myriad, often dissenting, perspectives. While the queen embodied middle-class domesticity, Reef reminds readers that she also oversaw the British Empire. A prime example is Victoria's balancing of her eldest son's education and the outbreak of the Crimean War. The plentiful lush images track both Victoria's Britain and changing artistic technologies and styles, from satirical Regency cartoons to family photographs. The appendices include a précis of the limits of monarchical power, a family tree, and a list of British rulers. Fact-seekers can navigate the extensive back matter with much success. VERDICT For history buffs and fans of historical fiction, this biography allows readers to immerse themselves in 19th-century voices and aesthetics.—Katherine Magyarody, Texas A&M University, College Station