Intending to write a biography on the artistic life of Queen Victoria's sixth child, Hawksley (
The Mystery of Princess Louise) contacted the Royal Archives (UK), only to be informed that the files of Princess Louise (1848–1939) were closed to researchers. Intrigued, the author pressed further, and her project became an attempt to unravel the mysteries shrouding many aspects of the princess's life. Hawksley is on solid footing in her exploration of Louise as an unconventional princess out of step with both her family and her era. The author's pinpointing of the supposed reason for the official secrecy on her subject—the long-standing rumor that the princess bore and surrendered an illegitimate child—is less successful. While the suggestion has potentially plausible elements, the reliance on supposition and matching up dates rather than definite evidence means it never rises above the level of hypothesis.
VERDICT This biography is strong in its presentations of its subject's personality and social circles but stumbles to fill in the gaps of Marie's life and hampered by Hawksley's decision not to include in-text citations. Interested readers might find Jehanne Wake's Princess Louise: Queen Victoria's Unconventional Daughter worth exploring.
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