
The Musculoskeletal System, 2nd Edition
Medical and Health & Fitness
App
This Elsevier app-book is developed by Medhand Mobile Libraries. Improve your performance with...

The Queen's Speech: An Intimate Portrait of the Queen in Her Own Words
Book
On 9 September 2015, Queen Elizabeth II will become the longest-serving monarch in British history....

St William of York
Book
St William of York achieved the unique distinction of being elected archbishop of York twice and...

Blindsided
Michael Lynagh and Mark Eglinton
Book
Former Australian rugby union legend and World Cup winner, now acclaimed television sports pundit,...

Charles Darwin: pocket GIANTS
Book
When Darwin announced his theory of evolution by natural selection, he did more than transform...

Articulating Dinosaurs: A Political Anthropology
Book
In this remarkable interdisciplinary study, anthropologist Brian Noble traces how dinosaurs and...

His True Queen (Smoke & Mirrors Duology Book 2)
Book
The breathtaking conclusion of the Smoke & Mirrors Duology. A beautiful, defiant princess. A...

The Black Lily
Mandy Burkhead and G.D. Burkhead
Book
Courtesan. Spy. Assassin. Across the Kingdom of Arestea, the shadowy league of professional...
courtesan assassin femme fatale royalty intrigue seduction

graveyardgremlin (7194 KP) rated Sisi: Empress on Her Own: A Novel in Books
Feb 15, 2019
I commend the author in all the research she did as I think she did an astounding job bringing Sisi to life, showing both her strengths and weaknesses. Most everything was brought to life in a way that was easy to visualize. However, in this book I found there to be more telling than showing as far as politics go, which could be a tad boring, plus I felt there were redundancies here and there. I didn't notice any major anachronism other than one phrase that jolted me out of the book that I dearly hope is not in the final edition (<a href="https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_time_no_see" targeet="_blank">"Long time no see."</a> if interested). The author provides a thorough section where she notes what was taken from history, leaving me to conclude what must be fiction. I found the fictional parts to be either likely or at least not implausible, excepting a couple incidents in Rudolf's (Sisi's son) youth that felt odd. I won't even touch on Sisi as a person, she's too complex and confounding to decribe in few words, but I felt that Pataki did the best she could at humanizing her while remaining true to her historical record.
Sisi (and the aforementioned The Accidental Empress) are a worthwhile addition to the genre that show a royal family not much touched upon in historical ficiton.
