Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 528
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4422-4174-9 • Hardback • October 2014 • $81.00 • (£62.00)
978-0-8108-9615-4 • Paperback • November 2017 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-4175-6 • eBook • October 2014 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Miranda Seymour is a biographer, novelist, and reviewer. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and recipient of the Pen Ackerley Memoir of the Year Prize for Thrumpton Hall, her extraordinary account of life at the family manor, which she now runs as a successful conference and wedding business. Her other acclaimed biographies include lives of Mary Shelley, Henry James, Robert Graves, Ottoline Morrell, and Helle Nice, the Bugatti Queen.
Her interest in the history of the relationship between England and Germany was triggered by her own background. In 1931, her English uncle was (inadvertently) almost responsible for Hitler’s death. His marriage to a German woman led Miranda on a quest for her family’s German links, which had been neglected and forgotten following World War II.
PART ONE
FROM A PROTESTANT ALLIANCE TO THE ENDING OF AN EMPIRE (1613–1919)
1 Noble Endeavours
2 Exiles and Travellers (1613–1782)
3 Romantic Exchanges (1790–1830)
4 Count Smorltork’s Progress (1826–32)
5 The Age of Virtue (1830–60)
6 Elizabeth Fry, Florence Nightingale and Charles de Bunsen’s German Hospital (1840–52)
7 Germanising England: The Albert Effect (1840–61)
8 Travels in a Foreign Land (1840–60)
9 The Eagle and the Lion (1858–88)
10 Lululaund and Other Adventures (1880–1910)
11 The Age of Apprehension (1888–1901)
12 The Friendship Under Strain (1902–10)
13 The Rift Widens (1906–14)
14 Debacle (1913–14)
15 Victims of Circumstance: England in Germany (1914–18)
16 Victims of Circumstance: Germany in England (1914–18)
17 Pay-Back (1918–19)
PART TWO
FROM VERSAILLES TO THE VERGE OF WAR (1919–40)
18 Love Among the Ruins (1919–23)
19 Reconnecting (1924–30)
20 Falling in Love Again: Tom Mitford (1909–45)
21 Entering the Abyss (1928–34)
22 Nikolaus Pevsner: The Odd One Out (1929–33)
23 The Young Ambassadors (1930–39)
24 And Then, There Was Romance (1930–39)
PART THREE
MOVING BEYOND REPAIR
25 Exodus (1933–8)
26 Noble Endeavours (1933–40)
27 Resisters and Informers (1933–40)
28 Fate and Circumstance (1939–45)
29 Only Connect
Afterword
Biographer Seymour, granddaughter of diplomat Richard Seymour who served in Berlin under Queen Victoria, captures the tumultuous relationship between England and Germany in this ambitious exploration of the period from 1613–1945. She opens with the union of Prince Frederick and Elizabeth Stuart—'marriage of the Thames and Rhine'—and runs through the 1840 match of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert that culminated in WWI. Long before the indelible scars created by 'the pity of war,' Seymour illustrates how intellectual attraction drew the two cultures together, sketching a series of illustrious Englishmen—for example, poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Friedrich Schiller’s translator) and William Thackeray. Most compelling is the minor royal who played a role in what might be called the family feud: Daisy, Princess of Pless—née Cornwallis-West—who in 1891 married into the German aristocracy. Daisy’s position afforded her a close view of the antipathy between Kaiser Wilhelm, Queen Victoria’s irascible grandson, and his Uncle Bertie, the Prince of Wales. Seymour draws on Daisy’s private papers, which foretold the inevitability of WWI, and interviews with her son Hansel, which revealed her own uncomfortable position during the conflict. Every family has its differences but Seymour lays out why this particular family’s intrigue is so irresistible.
— Publishers Weekly
In her new book, Seymour contends that no two European nations have a stronger history of cultural and familiar bonds than Germany and England. This work celebrates these connections and calls for a resurgence of the mutual admiration that once existed between these cousin nations. Beginning with the marriage of Elizabeth Stuart and Prince Frederick in 1612, Seymour explores how marriages of royals and nonroyals created dual identities for the children of these unions. Particularly appealing are the accounts of lesser-known figures such as Daisy Plessy and Hansel Plessy, mother and son, one interned by Germany and the other interned by England for being alien enemies during World War II. Equally compelling are the lives of Herbert Sulzbach and Heinz Koeppler, who worked with German prisoners of war during the same war, teaching them the skills necessary for democratic citizenship. By focusing on intercultural exchange, successful diplomatic relations, and cultural exchange, Seymour successfully makes the case that the nationalism of the era isn’t the only lens from which to examine the period. VERDICT A well-researched collection of stories that emphasizes the connection rather than the divide among nations, this book should appeal to students of international relations and peace studies as well as Anglophiles and Germanophiles.
— Library Journal
Miranda Seymour’s [stories] have a hypnotic effect. Imagine yourself outside a café overlooking a seaside esplanade. The mood is elegiac: nostalgia shot through with a sense of foreboding. . . .A vivid, well-researched book.
— BBC History Magazine
An arresting account of a complex and multi-faceted subject.
— Country Life
This is an impressive, meticulously researched and thought-provoking history.
— History Today
Seymour’s enormously entertaining . . . book acts as a much-needed counterweight to the glut of World War One histories that appeared in 2014; it paints the much larger picture of just how incredibly interconnected England and Germany were in the decades preceding the outbreak of war in 1914. Even long-time students of WWI will learn a great deal from this wonderful book.
— Stevereads
The Pity of War is a collection of the personal stories of the rich and the famous, many of whom had close family connections. . . .The chapters dealing with the 20th century are...interesting because there is more detail and longer biographical sketches.
— Daily News
A noble endeavour, encyclopaedic in its scope, beautifully organised and written, and very moving, as these two cousinly nations are driven asunder by war. A wonderful subject.
— Michael Frayn
Seymour provides an eloquent, perceptive and often moving account of that broader, longer and more benign sweep of history. (Previous Edition Praise)
— The Times (UK)
[Seymour’s] account of the First World War is both riveting and moving. . . . A gripping read and a new and strangely uplifting perspective on relations between these two countries. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Literary Review
Most readable and compulsive. . . . By writing her book as a patchwork of individual tales, Seymour allows this story of torn loyalties and proliferating influences to retain its messiness and its colour. (Previous Edition Praise)
— The Guardian
Miranda Seymour’s . . . hugely entertaining and absorbing study . . . keeps the political, military and diplomatic dimensions as a framework and focuses on two centuries of personal relationships, families and friendships. (Previous Edition Praise)
— The Daily Telegraph
Seymour’s masterstroke is to engage and teach us by letting the stories of real people shine through. . . . A timely reminder of a delicate, deeply felt relationship between two countries. (Previous Edition Praise)
— The Daily Express
Expands like an accordion, stories opening into more stories, and the whole propelled by prose that is lean and intricate. The book, which could be read for style alone, is an education and a handshake not only with the past, but with the present. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Telegraph
Miranda Seymour’s research is meticulous, and many of her vignettes are lively and perceptive. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Times Literary Supplement
• Winner, Stevereads Best Books of 2014: The History & Biography Honor Roll!