Reviews

The Second Empress: A Novel of Napoleon's Court by Michelle Moran

kellygoesgeocaching's review against another edition

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4.0

If you are like me and enjoy Phillippa Gregory's novels, this book is one you will probably enjoy. Where most of Gregory's fictional works focus on describing the events of English historical royals, this book does the same for Napoleon's last 6 years of rule. The style of writing is similar making it an easy read rather than a gruelling historical textbook.

As a book with three narrators who consist of roughly a third of the book's content each, it's almost inevitable to find one whose perspective you prefer. I looked forward to each chapter of Marie Louise's narration and racing through the other two characters to get to her next chapter.

Overall, a nice book which has taught me a little about Napoleon; a subject I was unlucky enough to never cover in school and only had a brief idea of.

stefs1974's review

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emotional informative medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

bookthra's review against another edition

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dark hopeful informative tense fast-paced

5.0

jennthegreat251's review against another edition

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4.0

I liked this book and it was a super easy read I finished it in a couple of hours.

nekomeith's review against another edition

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4.0

I knew practically nothing about Napoleon’s rule when I read this book and it was extremely interesting to see it from three points of view, that of his second wife, his oldest sister, and her sister’s chamberlain from Haiti. I greatly enjoyed learning about his rule and am certainly not an admirer of his work. Well written and historically accurate with a few exceptions mentioned by the author in the historical note, this is a great read!

whatsmacksaid's review against another edition

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4.0

Loved it. The voice actors were incredible, and the story was enthralling. I literally sat in my car for almost four hours going, "oh just one more track/chapter/CD"

jinny89's review against another edition

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4.0

My first book read in 2013!

I received The Second Empress as a Christmas present from my sister, because I was interested in branching out from historical royalty novels based on England. I was very excited to read this! I don’t know anything about Napoleon’s time period, and I did not know anything about his second wife, Marie-Louise either, so I was eager to read all about them. There’s certainly a sort of wonder in reading a historical novel without actually knowing the history behind it.

The Second Empress encompasses the last six years of Emperor Napoleon’s reign of the first French Empire. The point-of-view alternates between three characters: Marie-Lousie is an Austrian princess who grew up hating the French Empire. Unfortunately, she is in no position to turn down Napoleon’s marriage proposal as he would invade Austria otherwise and likely win. The second character is Princess Pauline, Napoleon’s sister. She has many, many lovers and suffers from some STDs which she takes mercury for. Of course, we know mercury actually will slowly poison you and impair your mental abilities. Pauline is absolutely infatuated with her brother and wants to rule the empire with him as his queen, like the Egyptians did as brother and sister two thousand years ago. The third character is Paul, a half-French half-Haitian man who traveled to France with Pauline after Napoleon took over Haiti. He is in love with Pauline and is waiting for her to fulfill her promise of going back to Haiti with him to live out the rest of their days.

Of course, lastly, we have Napoleon. He does not have his own point-of-view chapters, but he is certainly a major character in this story. Napoleon is at the peak of his power at the start of the novel and in need of an heir for his empire. Although he loves his wife, Josephine, despite her unfaithfulness, she cannot give him children so he feels compelled to divorce her and find someone who can. Also, he feels a strong need to associate himself with “true” royalty (he is, after all, from more humble origins), and thus, sets his gaze on Princess Marie-Louise.

I lament the fact that this book is quite short as I had a wonderful time reading it and didn’t want it to end so soon. I can’t vouch on how historically accurate it is because, as I mentioned earlier, I haven’t a clue as to what real history entailed during this period, but it seems to be very well researched, and it is certainly well written. I had absolutely no troubles reading it, it was so easy to slip into the time period and put myself at Napoleon’s court and be immersed in the lives of the characters and their lavish and difficult lives.

Even though the title character is Marie Louise, I felt Pauline and Napoleon are the characters that stuck out the most to me. The author does a great job creating the charismatic personalities of the Bonaparte siblings, even though they were also cruel and unlikable at the same time. I like how the book portrayed Napoleon even if he was kind of unlikable but I could tell there was something about him that guided him from being a commoner to the emperor of a vast empire. As for Pauline, I never heard of Pauline prior to this book and this novel showed how much influence she wielded over her brother. You know what, I actually would have loved this book even more if the book focused only on the two of them, because they were such interesting characters. They were hugely ambitious, passionate and selfish. Not always positive traits, but somehow entrancing at the same time.

As for the title character, Marie-Louise, she was okay. Just okay. She’s likable and all that, but her character did not shine as bright as one would hope. She was an obedient wife who did not want to anger Napoleon for fear of him invading her home country. Napoleon was a little cruel to her at times, but did care for her greatly overall. So, sad to say, she wasn’t actually that interesting. And the last point-of-view character Paul was also just okay to me too. He seemed to be a pretty intelligent fellow but he couldn’t tear himself away from Pauline, who was so obviously toxic. Actually, I didn’t really understand why he had a point-of-view in the novel, he didn’t seem like a particularly important character. Even in the afterword, all he got was two sentences whereas everyone else got entire paragraphs.

I enjoyed this book a lot and definitely would recommend to others to read. I actually have another Michelle Moran book – Nefertiti — that I bought ages ago and has been just sitting idly on my bookshelf; think I’ll go and read that one soon! This book has inspired me to look more into the Napoleonic time period, it was such a wonderful read.

stacyschuttler's review against another edition

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4.0

Great book....there could have been more to the end.

blodeuedd's review against another edition

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4.0

So far I have not read a Moran book that disappointed me, and I happy to say that one was just as good as the rest.

Through out the whole book there was this easy flow to it, I took it up and started reading and suddenly I found myself 1/3 through the book. So I did what any booklover would do, I finished it in one day. I really liked the flow, the book felt light by it.

The book itself spans over 6 years and has 3 POVS. Princess Marie-Louise who have to marry Napoleon. She is not happy but will do her duty. Then we have Napoleon's sister Pauline who is a piece of work, but still, she has issues too. And last Pauline's chamberlain Paul. They all give an insight and we get to see more than we would have since with just Marie-Louise around.

I like how Moran presents everyone, even with their faults she makes me see that there might be something behind all of it. Well except Napoleon, that guy was just crazy. But every man needs a vision.

The book felt different from the ones before, maybe because of the lightness, it was not that long either. She wove in the historical facts without making them heavy or making them too many.

I could go on and on. In the end, all I want to say is that I really enjoyed reading this book and that I recommend it to all.

jkkb332's review against another edition

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4.0

Thoughts: Enjoyed the different POVs, did not know about Napoleon's relationship with his sister, Maria Lucia very sympathetic and admirable, glad there was a happy ending for her, didn't understand why Paul held on to Pauline for so long but glad it didn't make him bitter, definitely going to read more of Moran's books.