<p>‘This book is excellent…Moore seems to have that rare gift of making a work both scholarly and yet as readable as a thriller.’ Julian Fellowes</p>
<p>‘A fascinating spectrum of female experience inside the Revolution and among the ruins it left behind… “Liberty” is extremely elegant and thought provoking…In mapping these six varied and overlapping lives, Moore vividly reminds us of the immense struggle there has been to establish political rights for women.’ Daily Telegraph</p>
<p>‘Lively, well-researched…it is no small task to bring together six such different lives against a historical background of rapid and complicated change but Lucy Moore has done it with skill and brio.’ Sunday Telegraph</p>

The bestselling author of ‘Maharanis’ recreates the lives of six remarkable women who, in a time of violent revolution, leapt at the chance to exercise their considerable charm, intelligence and acumen, and make their mark on history.

Germaine de Stael was an intellectual and an aristocrat, equally obsessed by politics and love affairs, who is said to have helped write the 1791 Constitution. Her fellow salonnière, Mme Roland, was a bourgeois housewife who became a fervent and influential revolutionary, until Robespierre’s regime sent her to the guillotine.

While female intellectuals sipped wine in their salons, their working class counterparts patrolled the streets of Paris with pistols in their belts. Theroigne de Mericourt was an ill-treated mistress when she fell in love with revolutionary ideals and became an ardent anti-royalist until a mob beating by ‘sans-culottes’ ended her activism. The mob in question was made up of members of the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women, whose founder, Pauline Leon, agitated for women's rights.

After the sans-culottes came the 'sans-chemises' – the glamorous (often skimpily clad) merveilleuses. Decadent Theresia Tallien combined sexual license with the secular amorality of the new Republic and reportedly helped engineer Robespierre's downfall. Her only rival for beauty was Juliette Recamier, whose elegance made her salons the most sought-after in Paris. When she refused Napoleon’s advances she was exiled from the city until his fall.

Writing with vigour and passion, Lucy Moore reanimates these witty salonnières, fervent citoyennes and glittering merveilleuses to illuminate the brief, hopeful period in which the Revolution seemed to offer them the freedom they craved – and the ways in which it failed.

Les mer

The bestselling author of ‘Maharanis’ recreates the lives of six remarkable women who, in a time of violent revolution, leapt at the chance to exercise their considerable charm, intelligence and acumen, and make their mark on history.

Les mer
  • Includes PS Section

• Vivid and enormously engaging, ‘Liberty’ delightfully recreates the lives of six brave and remarkable women who lived during an extraordinary time of revolution and upheaval.

• Lucy Moore is one of our most exciting narrative historians – voted one of the ‘top twenty young writers in Britain’ by the Independent on Sunday and ‘Best of Young British’ by the New Statesman.

• The varying experiences of the women shed a fresh light on this fascinating historical turning point and its broader social, cultural and political implications.

• ‘Maharanis’ has been reprinted six times and sold over 12,000 copies in hardback in the UK alone. It was an Evening Standard bestseller, and the top-selling non-fiction title in WHSmith on paperback publication in summer 2005.

Competition: Judith Flanders; Antonia Fraser; Jane Brown

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780007206025
Publisert
2007-07-02
Utgiver
HarperCollins Publishers
Vekt
373 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
34 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
352

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Lucy Moore was born in 1970 and educated in Britain and the United States before reading history at Edinburgh University. She is the author and editor of many books including the critically acclaimed ‘Maharanis’. Lucy is a regular book reviewer for the Observer and the Sunday Times, she was voted one of the 'top twenty young writers in Britain' by the Independent on Sunday and featured in the Writers section of the New Statesman's ‘Best of Young British’ issue. She lives in London.