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    The Diana Chronicles

    The Diana Chronicles
    Author: Tina Brown
    Publisher: Doubleday
    Category: Book

    Buy Used: $0.01



    New (1) Used (15) from $0.01

    Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 131 reviews
    Sales Rank: 2976427

    Format: Import
    Media: Hardcover
    Pages: 496
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
    Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.8

    ISBN: 1846052866
    EAN: 9781846052866
    ASIN: 1846052866

    Publication Date: 2007
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Also Available In:

      • Paperback - The Diana Chronicles
      • Mass Market Paperback - The Diana Chronicles
      • Hardcover - The Diana Chronicles
      • Hardcover - The Diana Chronicles (Random House Large Print (Cloth/Paper))
      • Audio CD - The Diana Chronicles
      • Paperback - THE DIANA CHRONICLES
      • Audio Download - The Diana Chronicles (Unabridged)
      • Audio Download - The Diana Chronicles
      • Kindle Edition - The Diana Chronicles
      • Paperback - The Diana Chronicles

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      • Diana, An Amazing Life: The People Cover Stories, 1981-1997

    Customer Reviews:   Read 126 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars a somewhat derivative yet competent biography   October 28, 2008
    lazza (Fort Lauderdale, Florida)
    No, 'The Diana Chronicles' doesn't break any new ground on the telling of the life and death of Princess Diana. Most everything Tina Brown writes has been written before. But for people like me who haven't read previous works about Diana Spencer this book is a very good, concise telling of the very famous and troubled woman. And the author is a very gifted journalist. She remains generally objective throughout and doesn't pull the reader into the gutter with regards to Princess Diana's somewhat salacious relationships. However the author's overall disdain of British aristocracy shines through.


    Bottom line: if you want to read only one biographical account of Princess Diana I think this book would be a prudent choice.



    4 out of 5 stars Most interesting read   August 8, 2008
    armchairinterviews.com (Minnesota)
    I had just returned from a dinner. The media was rife with the coverage: black metal gnarled from the unforgiving concrete pillars in a Parisian tunnel on a humid August night. A princess whose fate was unknown. With bated breath, I kept the news on as the "princess of the people" was laid to rest.

    Three years later, I rode through the very tunnel, overwhelmed at the lives ended in this seemingly innocuous location.

    The difficulty when reading a biography--or an autobiography, for that matter--is discerning fact from fiction. Tina Brown's The Diana Chronicles, however, whether 100 percent accurate or not, seems to ring true in that she does an excellent job in making Diana three-dimensional.

    We see Diana the lover, the mother, the humanitarian. We also see her as the woman--the princess--who knew how to groom the media to further her status. This affair became tragically toxic one night in a Parisian tunnel.

    The Diana Chronicles, now available in paperback, enjoyed success on the bestseller lists upon its initial 2007 publication.

    Tina Brown, who met Diana 10 months before her untimely death, has become an expert on the royals, candidly uncovering the prevailing attitudes and dalliances of Britain's monarchy--and those in close proximity to its power.

    Brown didn't need much help in spinning a tale thick with twists: Diana's life reads more like a soap opera script. We see Diana, the doe-eyed child, abandoned by a mother and raised by English nannies. Diana the teenager, who captivated a young Prince Charles. Then there's the bride who captivated the world with her real-life fairy tale wedding turned sour divorce when the roving-eyed Charles falls back into the arms of Camilla.

    Throw in a handsome Egyptian playboy, a handful of paparazzi and extravagance. Lies, betrayal, affairs -it was all a recipe for tragedy--a tragedy that made two rosy-cheeked blond children casualties in the war of the Windsors.

    The bottom line is: Even more than a decade after Diana's death, the princess of the people still has the ability to captivate.

    Armchair Interviews agrees.



    4 out of 5 stars Pleasantly Surprised   July 30, 2008
    Erin Frances Schulz (New York, NY)
    Tina Brown's book combines history with pop culture and brings the reader a whole new presentation of Princess Diana. I was wary about purchasing it at first, fearing that it would be too gossipy but instead I found that I was touched by her story. The attention to detail is remarkable and covers the life of Princess Diana with a true journalist's touch. I highly suggest it for anyone who has even a remote interest in Princess Diana or the current British Royal Family in general.


    4 out of 5 stars A biography of both Diana and the media coverage that shaped her   July 27, 2008
    Stacey M Jones (Conway, Ark.)
    7 out of 7 found this review helpful

    I started THE DIANA CHRONICLES by Tina Brown by reading it in the store in parts. I figured it was ANOTHER Diana book, and I could pass some pleasant hours in the bookstore sitting in a chair going over some familiar ground. But I was surprised: Brown is an insightful, clear and unflinching writer who has the ability, due to her experience in print journalism, to view the famous through a cynical but knowledgeable media lens. This book was so good, that when I got 300 pages in to the 500-plus-page book, I bought it. It was getting hard to find, and I NEEDED to finish it.

    The plotline of Diana's life does not need to be repeated here. What this book is good for is the way it examines her life and her responses to the events of her life as influenced by the media and the media coverage of the her every move. It's as if it weren't Diana and the media professionals who were in a relationship, but Diana and the media coverage who influenced each other. This study is a fascinating examination of how media attention can become a character in the narrative of a famous person's life. According to Brown, Diana made decisions not just in response to the other people in her life, but in reaction to press and how her actions might be reported and perceived. She lost the goal, at some points, of how press attention can influence individuals and became focused on the press itself.

    This book presents a strong narrative, a plotline of a life that is compelling and cogent. Though we know the story well, Brown's reportage is complete and portrays not only a whole Diana, but a complete Charles and other royals who had to orbit her star while she was alive.

    This was a fascinating book to read as an examination of a woman of fame who could not help but respond to the expectations of women in the times in which she lived. Reading THE DIANA CHRONICLES, one cannot help but think of the price some women pay to be the feminine, compassionate women the world wants them to be. When that world is personified by papparazzi and reporters in fragile woman's day-to-day life, her response can be astonishing.



    5 out of 5 stars Detailed Portrait   July 24, 2008
    E. K. Johnson (Scottsdale, Arizona)
    This is an even handed, rich portrait of a very complicated young woman. I purchased the audio thinking it was a fluff piece I could listen to while working out, but found the book fascinating and was sorry when it was over. Tina Brown presents each of the major characters in this tragedy as multifaceted individuals, making this not the usual tabloid nonsense, but a sociological study of a very interesting and often self-destructive family.


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