Rating:  Summary: Wow! As good as it gets... Review: "Queen Victoria's Family" by Charlotte Zeepvat is a wonderful book, one of the best books I ever read. I like Queen Victoria very much and have already read so many books about her and her family, but this is my special favorite. Because of the fantastic pictures Victoria and her family become alive again in this book. I think there is no other book about Victoria with so many and such beautiful pictures. Besides, I can say that Charlotte Zeepvat is an excellent author, her other book about Queen Victoria's son Leopold is also great. "Queen Victoria's Family" is a must-read book for everyone who is interested in this topic. Read it, you will be as enthusiastic about it as I am.
Rating:  Summary: Loved it! Review: Absolutely remarkable. Charlotte Zeepvat takes the reader into the lives of Queen Victoria and her family with the amazing photographs, both candid and formal. The pictures are rare. They are well organized and have excellent captions. Zeepvat is a great writer/historian and I recommend her books to all.
Rating:  Summary: Great book Review: for those interested in royalty. While some of these photos can be found in many different books, some of them I've seen for the first time. Queen Victoria's decendants are so numerous and belong to so many different royal houses. Definitely a worthwhile purchase!
Rating:  Summary: Excellent addition to a collection Review: I was pleasantly surprised by the photo album book of Queen Victoria's family. Many interesting pictures were included that I had not seen before in my collection of 19th and 20th century pictures of British, Russian, and German royalty. They were well-documented and I would highly recommend the book.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent addition to a collection Review: I was pleasantly surprised by the photo album book of Queen Victoria's family. Many interesting pictures were included that I had not seen before in my collection of 19th and 20th century pictures of British, Russian, and German royalty. They were well-documented and I would highly recommend the book.
Rating:  Summary: Photos Both Obscure and Well Known Review: Queen Victoria's Family traces the photographical history of Queen Victoria's descendants from about 1840 to 1940. Some of the pictures are very familiar to any royal aficionado, but most are fairly new and show a lot of the less prominent members of the family, like the descendants of Leopold Duke of Albany, who tend to get the short end of the stick from other royal chroniclers. Its nice to browse through and because its arranged chronologically, the inherited family characteristics like weak chins and prominent eyes really jump out. It must have been difficult to tell the Waleses from the Edinburghs and the Glucksburgs from the Bernadottes at times! Its also interesting to see childhood pictures of some of today's royals. There's one picture of Prince Philip, for example, that looks just like his son Prince Edward at about the same age. Finally, this is a nice book because it helps us realize that the European royals were and are just one big extended family with multitudinous branches.
Rating:  Summary: 100 years of royal photographs Review: The key to this book is actually in it's subtitle : 100 years of royal photography. It is heavy in photographs of Queen Victoria's family and her descendants. It deals not only with her children, but their children and grandchildren.The pictures in this book are all of good quality, and some are not commonly seen on books on English royalty. Each photograph has a little story attched giving you some information on the person in the picture and something about what path their life took. There is some intersting information and suprises in these little stories. The photos are divided into both private and public, so you get a mixture of family photos and some of royalty dressed to the hilt in jewels to die for. An interesting, but slightly dissapointing book, as I would have loved to see more 19th century photos and maybe a greater range of formal pictures.
Rating:  Summary: 100 years of royal photographs Review: The key to this book is actually in it's subtitle : 100 years of royal photography. It is heavy in photographs of Queen Victoria's family and her descendants. It deals not only with her children, but their children and grandchildren. The pictures in this book are all of good quality, and some are not commonly seen on books on English royalty. Each photograph has a little story attched giving you some information on the person in the picture and something about what path their life took. There is some intersting information and suprises in these little stories. The photos are divided into both private and public, so you get a mixture of family photos and some of royalty dressed to the hilt in jewels to die for. An interesting, but slightly dissapointing book, as I would have loved to see more 19th century photos and maybe a greater range of formal pictures.
Rating:  Summary: What a photo collection! Review: There are certain photos that I simply expect to see when perusing volumes about European royalty. However, upon receiving Zeepvat's book, I was thrilled to find so many rarely seen photos of some of the more obscure descendants of the "Grandmother of Europe." If you're a royalty buff like I am, you can spend hours immersed in this marvelous book and its detailed family trees.
Rating:  Summary: Wonderful Photo Album of Victoria's Family Review: This book is basically just a photo album of Queen Victoria's family. There is very little in the way of text, but there is little need for it, the pictures speak for themselves. Queen Victoria was connected to most every royal family in Europe and there are pictures of many of her royal relatives here with a little of their stories. The pictures are very interesting, and the author has managed to get most of the family represented.
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