![]() ![]() ![]() By reconstructing Josephine’s life and world, Andrea Stuart brilliantly captures the extraordinary drama of the age and its unique atmosphere and social significance. More eventful than the most lurid novel, no single life so embodies the vice and virtues, the tumult and dangers of the period through which she lived. As the revolution reached its endgame, Josephine, now widowed with two small children, met her Emperor and the rest, as they say, is history. Expecting an exotic Creole bride, Beaharnais set about a radical transformation and the dowdy teenager soon became a sophisticated sensual beauty, the darling of the pre-revolutionary salons. Andrea Stuart shares with her subject a Caribbean background and is able to offer a unique insight into the world which Josephine left as a plump schoolgirl for Paris and marriage to her cousin, Viscount Alexandre Beauharnais. ![]() Hitherto, her life has been portrayed almost entirely in connection with Napoleon, but that relationship, fascinating though it undoubtedly was, was only a tiny fraction of the life she led as a Caribbean women in the salons of eighteenth-century Paris. Her book The Rose of Martinique: A Life of Napoleons Josephine has been translated into three languages and won the Enid McLeod Literary Prize. Using diaries and letters, Andrea Stuart expertly re-creates Josephines whirlwind of a life, which began with an isolated Caribbean childhood and led to a. One of the most potent icons of female sexuality, Josephine has largely been reduced to an empty cipher, the butt of one of the oldest jokes around. ![]()
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