The Women of Rothschild: The Untold Story of the World’s Most Famous Dynasty

The Women of Rothschild: The Untold Story of the World’s Most Famous Dynasty
by Natalie Livingstone
480 pages, Hardcover
St. Martin’s Press
Expected publication date: 25 October 2022

Rating: 4 stars

The Rothschilds are a dynasty eponymous for wealth, but the women of the family have been long relegated to the shadows of history despite their major influence on English culture and society in their time.

The only thing I knew about the Rothschilds before reading this book was the myth about Nathan Rothschild making a treacherous fortune on the news of Waterloo. I had not considered the women of this family at all – which really is a shame, considering how fascinating they are.

In this book, Livingstone traces the lives of the Rothschild women who lived in England – the descendants of Nathan Mayer, who was one of the five brothers who established the family bank as an international entity. The women led fascinating lives, involving themselves in politics, charity, science, and even the family business despite a generation-long edict against female involvement. Despite the plethora of people discussed in the book, they were easy to tell apart due to the way the author strongly established their personalities.

However, the timeline of the book occasionally became confusing as we moved back and forth between the women being profiled in the different sections. I was also really disappointed that, after the level of detail in the first half of the book, some of the women in Parts III and IV were barely touched upon, though I am aware that this may have been due to the destruction of family papers that Livingstone referenced a few times throughout the book.

~

Description:

In The Women of Rothschild, Natalie Livingstone reveals the role of women in shaping the legacy of the famous Rothschild dynasty, synonymous with wealth and power.

From the East End of London to the Eastern seaboard of the United States, from Spitalfields to Scottish castles, from Bletchley Park to Buchenwald, and from the Vatican to Palestine, Natalie Livingstone follows the extraordinary lives of the Rothschild women from the dawn of the nineteenth century to the early years of the twenty-first.

As Jews in a Christian society and women in a deeply patriarchal family, they were outsiders. Excluded from the family bank, they forged their own distinct dynasty of daughters and nieces, mothers and aunts. They became influential hostesses and talented diplomats, choreographing electoral campaigns, advising prime ministers, advocating for social reform, and trading on the stock exchange. Misfits and conformists, conservatives and idealists, performers and introverts, they mixed with everyone from Queen Victoria to Chaim Weizmann, Rossini to Isaiah Berlin, and the Duke of Wellington to Alec Guinness, as well as with amphetamine-dealers, suffragists and avant-garde artists. Rothschild women helped bring down ghetto walls in early nineteenth-century Frankfurt, inspired some of the most remarkable cultural movements of the Victorian period, and in the mid-twentieth century burst into America, where they patronized Thelonious Monk and drag-raced through Manhattan with Miles Davis.

Absorbing and compulsive, The Women of Rothschild gives voice to the complicated, privileged, and gifted women whose vision and tenacity shaped history.

~

Disclaimer: I received an ARC of this book from NetGalley. This is my honest and voluntary review.

This post contains affiliate links to Bookshop. If you purchase a book using this link, I will make a small commission at no extra cost to you!

Cleopatra: Her History, Her Myth

Cleopatra: Her History, Her Myth
by Francine Prose
208 pages, Hardcover
Yale University Press
Expected publication date: November 8, 2022

Rating: 3 stars

Francine Prose tells the story of Cleopatra (VII Philopater, if you want to be specific), her entanglement with the Roman Empire, and how she has become distorted in cultural depictions after her death.

In a way, I am reading this book in preparation – I’ve got the reading of a retelling of Cleopatra’s life set in space (!) coming up, and I figured that I’d appreciate it more if I gave myself a better grounding of the historical subject matter first. Also, I’ve always found Cleopatra’s story fascinating, so it was no skin off my nose.

This is a pretty basic, straightforward history of Cleopatra’s life that does not engage in very much speculation, but presents the facts as they are given in ancient sources. F0r this reason, I think it would appeal best to those who don’t know much about Cleopatra and want to learn about her, but don’t want to read a doorstopper of a biography.

I think this book works best when it discusses the myths around Cleopatra and how she is depicted on stage and on screen, as the author discusses how she is portrayed in a number of mediums and sources

However, while Prose does question the veracity of these sources and engages critically with them, I felt that by the end of the book she was leaning pretty hard on Plutarch’s interpretation without gainsaying them much. I also wished Prose had gone a little further and gotten into the murkier parts of Cleopatra’s life, the things that aren’t so well-documented, to give the reader a broader picture of her. While we got Cleopatra’s story, I did not feel we got to know her.

~

Description:

A feminist reinterpretation of the myths surrounding Cleopatra casts new light on the Egyptian queen and her legacy.

The siren passionately in love with Mark Antony, the seductress who allegedly rolled out of a carpet she had herself smuggled in to see Caesar, Cleopatra is a figure shrouded in myth. Beyond the legends immortalized by Plutarch, Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, and others, there are no journals or letters written by Cleopatra herself. All we have to tell her story are words written by others.

What has it meant for our understanding of Cleopatra to have had her story told by writers who had a political agenda, authors who distrusted her motives, and historians who believed she was a liar? Francine Prose delves into ancient Greek and Roman literary sources, as well as modern representations of Cleopatra in art, theater, and film. She challenges the common narratives driven by orientalism and misogyny and offers a new interpretation of Cleopatra’s history from the lens of our own era.

~

Disclaimer: I received an ARC of this book from NetGalley. This is my honest and voluntary review.

This post contains affiliate links to Bookshop. If you purchase a book using this link we will make a small commission at no extra cost to you!