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The Private Realm of Marie Antoinette

The Private Realm of Marie Antoinette

List Price: $22.50
Your Price: $15.30
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An absolutely beautiful book!
Review: A combination of book and little jewel box! A visually stunning book, it captures in its photos and drawings the magnificence of French court life during the reign of King Louis XVI. Marie Antoinette had such exquisite taste and the author conveys this admirably. A definite keeper!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A lovely tribute to a royal lifestyle...
Review: A lovely look into the private world of the French queen, but I was disappointed to find so little attention paid to the interiors of the Petit Trianon. The author claims that since Marie Antoinette made so few changes to these rooms, the reader would experience her touch more readily via the Hamlet, heavily featured within the book's pages. I disagree...the Petit Trianon does indeed bear the Queen's stamp, particularly her bedchamber, which is simple yet exquisite. The "moving mirrors" which can obscure the windows of the bedchamber were, to her contemporaries, and in truth all of Paris , absolutely representative of the Queen's taste. It may be that these mirrors, like the mechanism in the dining room which allows the table to be raised up from the kitchen below so servants are never seen (condusive to clandestine trists), date from the time of Louis XV. Regardless, the "room of the moving mirrors", to this reader, exclaims "Marie Antoinette!". I urge any reader of this review, when in France, to tour the jewel box that is the Petit Trianon. In conjunction with the Hamlet, one can get a true feel for the informal lifestyle Marie Antoinette so strived for when staying there. However, overall, the book is such a nice addition to any collection dealing with the Queen's life, or 18th century French architecture and decor that I highly recommend it. I did find an error as the author claims Marie Antoinette called her eldest son her "chou d'amour".

Indeed, Marie Antoinette gave her son this charming pet name, but it was to her youngest boy, Louis-Charles, the Duc de Normandie and future Louis XVII (who would never rule)not Louis-Joseph, who died around the time the Estates-General convened, right before the revolution. The book's argument as to how influential and innovative Marie Antoinette actually was to the decorative arts at the end of that century is not to my mind adequately summed up. Personally, I don't think an answer to that question much matters. Marie Antoinette, through pure force of personality, and the influence of her high position, defined a lifestyle, very much in tune with the American "pursuit of happiness". In this she succeeded admirably.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A lovely tribute to a royal lifestyle...
Review: A lovely look into the private world of the French queen, but I was disappointed to find so little attention paid to the interiors of the Petit Trianon. The author claims that since Marie Antoinette made so few changes to these rooms, the reader would experience her touch more readily via the Hamlet, heavily featured within the book's pages. I disagree...the Petit Trianon does indeed bear the Queen's stamp, particularly her bedchamber, which is simple yet exquisite. The "moving mirrors" which can obscure the windows of the bedchamber were, to her contemporaries, and in truth all of Paris , absolutely representative of the Queen's taste. It may be that these mirrors, like the mechanism in the dining room which allows the table to be raised up from the kitchen below so servants are never seen (condusive to clandestine trists), date from the time of Louis XV. Regardless, the "room of the moving mirrors", to this reader, exclaims "Marie Antoinette!". I urge any reader of this review, when in France, to tour the jewel box that is the Petit Trianon. In conjunction with the Hamlet, one can get a true feel for the informal lifestyle Marie Antoinette so strived for when staying there. However, overall, the book is such a nice addition to any collection dealing with the Queen's life, or 18th century French architecture and decor that I highly recommend it. I did find an error as the author claims Marie Antoinette called her eldest son her "chou d'amour".

Indeed, Marie Antoinette gave her son this charming pet name, but it was to her youngest boy, Louis-Charles, the Duc de Normandie and future Louis XVII (who would never rule)not Louis-Joseph, who died around the time the Estates-General convened, right before the revolution. The book's argument as to how influential and innovative Marie Antoinette actually was to the decorative arts at the end of that century is not to my mind adequately summed up. Personally, I don't think an answer to that question much matters. Marie Antoinette, through pure force of personality, and the influence of her high position, defined a lifestyle, very much in tune with the American "pursuit of happiness". In this she succeeded admirably.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Open the cover and journey to Antoinette's Versailles
Review: As the author of a novel and an award-winning website dedicated to the tragic and dazzling queen, I am a bonafide Marie Antoinette fanatic. For years now, I have read every scrap of paper ever written about Marie Antoinette. I am thrilled to learn new things (like that she drank hot chocolate made with orange water to soothe her sore throat or that she once flicked bread crumbs across the table at Louis XVI). Too, I have been to Petite Trianon and Le Hameau. I have wandered the paths and rolling hills, I have fingered the woodwork in her private rooms.

This beautiful and interesting book is like taking a trip to Versailles (but far less expensive and minus the crowds). The photographs are breath taking, the writing is entertaining.

This book is eye-candy for anyone who appreciates 18th century France, architecture or gardening. It is a MUST OWN book for anyone even remotely interested in My Queen....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Open the cover and journey to Antoinette's Versailles
Review: As the author of a novel and an award-winning website dedicated to the tragic and dazzling queen, I am a bonafide Marie Antoinette fanatic. For years now, I have read every scrap of paper ever written about Marie Antoinette. I am thrilled to learn new things (like that she drank hot chocolate made with orange water to soothe her sore throat or that she once flicked bread crumbs across the table at Louis XVI). Too, I have been to Petite Trianon and Le Hameau. I have wandered the paths and rolling hills, I have fingered the woodwork in her private rooms.

This beautiful and interesting book is like taking a trip to Versailles (but far less expensive and minus the crowds). The photographs are breath taking, the writing is entertaining.

This book is eye-candy for anyone who appreciates 18th century France, architecture or gardening. It is a MUST OWN book for anyone even remotely interested in My Queen....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Fairy Queen
Review: I must agree with the other reviewers, and say this a wonderful book. The text is limited, but the photographs make it well worth your while. In all there are 123 illustrations, 108 of them in color, and each is more beautiful than the former.

The photographs focus mainly on the small details of Marie Antoinette's rooms, rather than the entire room itself. It is all those small details that made her style so exquisite.

Represented here are her private apartments at Versailles, the Petit Trianon her little stone treasure, the Hamlet she created so that she could pretend to be a simple county girl, the opulent boudoir at the chateau de Fontainbleau, and the simple yet elegant laiterie at Rambouillet.

Like the former reviewer, I was disappointed in the lack of focus on the interior of the Petit Trianon (there is only an antique postcard depicting her bedroom there), but I think that was my only disappointment. I especially enjoyed the section on her boudior at Fontainebleau, which is Marie Antoinette at her grandest.

Overall, it is a delectable little book that you should enjoy for years to come. After all, those places lucky enough to have been stamped by her unique taste are as timeless as the great lady herself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Fairy Queen
Review: I must agree with the other reviewers, and say this a wonderful book. The text is limited, but the photographs make it well worth your while. In all there are 123 illustrations, 108 of them in color, and each is more beautiful than the former.

The photographs focus mainly on the small details of Marie Antoinette's rooms, rather than the entire room itself. It is all those small details that made her style so exquisite.

Represented here are her private apartments at Versailles, the Petit Trianon her little stone treasure, the Hamlet she created so that she could pretend to be a simple county girl, the opulent boudoir at the chateau de Fontainbleau, and the simple yet elegant laiterie at Rambouillet.

Like the former reviewer, I was disappointed in the lack of focus on the interior of the Petit Trianon (there is only an antique postcard depicting her bedroom there), but I think that was my only disappointment. I especially enjoyed the section on her boudior at Fontainebleau, which is Marie Antoinette at her grandest.

Overall, it is a delectable little book that you should enjoy for years to come. After all, those places lucky enough to have been stamped by her unique taste are as timeless as the great lady herself.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A piece of carp
Review: I was extremely disappointed in this book. This is a junk book you'd pick up at a souvenier shop. It takes a worthier and more particular kind of person to appreciate entire pages devoted to a few inches of motif taking up entire pages.








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