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Caroline Blackwood Critical Essay | Critical Review by Jonathan Yardley

This literature criticism consists of approximately 3 pages of analysis & critique of Caroline Blackwood.
This section contains 853 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Caroline Blackwood - Critical Review by Jonathan Yardley

Critical Review by Jonathan Yardley

SOURCE: "The Duchess and Her Keeper," in Washington Post, March 22, 1995, p. C2.

In the review below, Yardley describes The Last of the Duchess as an odd, dark story that is both witty and perceptive.

This peculiar but beguiling book is the account of how its author, a British journalist and novelist who now lives in the United States, tried to obtain an interview with the Duchess of Windsor in the last years of that controversial woman's long life. She failed, but she managed to hook up with a woman even odder—if one can imagine such—than the duchess herself.

That woman was Suzanne Blum, universally known as Maître Blum, the octogenarian French attorney who seized control of the duchess's life after the death in 1972 of the duke—the onetime King of England, Edward VIII. By 1980 she had the duchess locked away in the Paris house that the French...
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This section contains 853 words
(approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Caroline Blackwood - Critical Review by Jonathan Yardley
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Caroline Blackwood - Critical Review by Jonathan Yardley from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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