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A Charmed Life: Growing Up in Macbeth's Castle [Hardcover]

Liza Campbell (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 16, 2007

We grew up with the same parents in the same castle, but in many ways we each had a moat around us.  Sometimes when visitors came they would say, “You are such lucky children; it’s a fairytale life you live.” And I knew they were right, it was a fairytale upbringing.  But fairy tales are dark and I had no way of telling either a stranger or a friend what was going on; the abnormal became ordinary.

 

Liza Campbell was the last child to be born at the impressive and renowned Cawdor Castle, the family seat of the Campbells, as featured in Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Liza’s father Hugh, the twenty-fifth Thane, inherited dashing good looks, brains, immense wealth, an ancient and revered title, three stately homes, and 100,000 acres of land.  A Charmed Life tells the story of Liza’s idyllic childhood with her four siblings in Wales in the 1960s, until Hugh inherited Cawdor Castle and moved his family up to the Scottish Highlands.  It was at the historical ancestral home that the fairytale began to resemble a nightmare.

 

Increasingly overwhelmed by his enormous responsibilities, Hugh tipped into madness fuelled by drink, drugs, and extramarital affairs.  Over the years, the castle was transformed into an arena of reckless extravagance and terrifying domestic violence, leading to the abrupt termination of a legacy that had been passed down through the family for six hundred years.

 

Written with a sharp wit, A Charmed Life is a contemporary fairytale that tells what is like to grow up as a maiden in a castle where ancient curses and grisly events from centuries ago live on between its stone walls.  Painstakingly honest and thoroughly entertaining, Liza Campbell offers a compelling look at what it is like to grow up with enormous privilege and yet watch the father she idealizes destroy himself, his family, and his heritage.

 

 

Praise for A CHARMED LIFE:

 

"Beautifully written…eminently readable…A memoir which has many elements to identify with--even if you ain't no Lady." --Tama Janowitz, author of Slaves of New York and Area Code 212

 

“Campbell tells the wild, sorry tale with a sharp, offhand wit.” -- Sunday Times (UK)

“She writes not from catharsis or revenge, but in the spirit of puzzlement and discovery...Completely compelling.” -- Daily Telegraph (UK)
 
“A gripping page turner...A CHARMED LIFE is a great title, and Liza Campbell's book lives up to it.” -- Daily Mail (UK)

 

“A modern tragedy ... Written with great courage ... A stark tale of profligacy and injustice.” -- Country Life (UK)


“A very powerful, painful story...I have never read such a compelling study of addiction...An exceptional writer.” -- Mail on Sunday (UK)

“This is a sad book; yet Campbell’s lack of sentimentality and needle-sharp wit make for a guiltily voyeuristic read.” – Independent (UK)


“A memoir that is as free of self-pity as it is of sentimentality ... Poignant.”

Scotsman (UK)

 

“As a prose stylist, Liza is comparable to Nancy Astor: wry, deadpan, whimsical.” -- The Sunday Telegraph (UK)



Editorial Reviews

Review

“Poignant…lovely.” – Entertainment Weekly
 
"Edged with relentless wit...[A Charmed Life is a] nightmarish memoir that gives fiction a run for its money." --Kirkus Reviews
 
"Intriguing...highly readable story...extraordinary." --Tuscon Citizen

Book Description

“You are such lucky children,” Liza Campbell was often told, “it’s a fairytale life you live.”  Liza’s father did, after all, hold the title of Thane of Cawdor, and the family divided their time between Cawdor Castle (as featured in Shakespeare’s Macbeth) and other impressive homes in England and Wales.  Theirs was a family with a legacy that had lasted almost a millennium.  Her father would, in the course of his life and his descent in to madness and addiction, fail to pass that legacy along.  He was a man haunted by demons; he would often drink himself into oblivion, recklessly driving along the narrow roads of northern Scotland and Wales, routinely crashing and coming within an inches of death.  In his moments of “reformation,” he still lived in an alternate reality.  This is the story of her early life, her family, and her father's ultimate failure. 
            This wonderful, heartbreaking, yet ultimately forgiving memoir recalls a childhood played out on an extraordinary and secluded stage.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books; First Edition edition (October 16, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312374771
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312374778
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.9 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #155,906 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
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3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

58 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Charmed Life, October 16, 2007
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This review is from: A Charmed Life: Growing Up in Macbeth's Castle (Hardcover)
(By Elizabeth Miller) My Alabama book club read the British edition of A Charmed Life in September. We all agreed it was a great choice and a marvelous story. It's a tightly written and poignant anthropological study of a privileged, titled, and terribly dysfunctional British family living in Macbeth's famous Cawdor Castle. A generous dash of dark humor counterbalances the grimness of the tale. Liza's book tries to convey to the reader an understanding of her father, and perhaps provide closure for her and her siblings. But frankly no excuse can be made for his betrayal of the Campbell children and shattering of the family legacy. Our book club ladies felt that Liza touched on a number of universal truths, and we could all relate to growing up in a family unlike the ideal TV families of the 1960's. We recommend A Charmed Life to all who would appreciate a sad, touching, and thoroughly memorable story of an extraordinary family. And where else have you seen the word "crepuscular" used so aptly?
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43 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside Aristocracy, January 27, 2007
The author, a professional writer, gives great insight into a life few can know: growing up in a rich and powerful family that traces its ancestors back 24 generations. Liza Campbell grew up in Wales although the family's main stronghold is Cawdor Castle, a handsome baronial pile just outside of Inverness, Scotland.

Liza tells about a surprisingly down to earth childhood guided by her parents, calm and distant Cath and her volatile and also much absent father Hugh. Her father is the central character in the book, both alive and dead. He wields a strong influence on his five children and their interactions with him and about him form the main story.

Having been to Cawdor, and loving Inverness and that part of Scotland, I was delighted to hear about this book. It did not disappoint in giving insight into the workings of the Campbell family and the well known castle which is their home.

edited to add: I vistied Cawdor castle again two months ago. It's one of the better castle open to the public in Scotland, I think, because it is a family home and yet it has large, extensive collections and gardens to interest anyone ( I liked it better than Blair Atholl, for instance.) It has some fabulous furniture and interiors. I guess the battle for ownership still rages on, so sad.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "The Glass Castle" of the Scottish Aristocracy, January 28, 2009
By 
J. Landau (Orinda, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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Absolutely riveting story of Liza Campbell's extraordinary 700-year old family's most recent generations, as bizarre and fascinating as the wildest fiction and all apparently true. It revolves around the recent history of the family that actually lived in Macbeth's castle. It has everything: sex, money, castles (stone rather than glass), fast cars, guns and battles, outrageous aristocratic misadventures, the stepmother from hell and the Scottish countryside.

The book starts off like chick-lit, but any guy will soon be hooked too --something about her father totaling five XK-Es following by the destruction of three Ferraris, having sex with over one hundred women, etc. A mother who is up for sainthood, five delightful siblings, young girls branded by their parents before they were kidnapped so they could be identified years later . . . it makes the life of the author of the bestseller "The Glass Castle" seem mundane by comparison.

Liza Campbell is a wonderful storyteller. Without giving away much, it is a story of family relationships and ill-placed trust with the author trying to see the best in what can only be described as a villain for the ages, or at least a man capable of destroying seven centuries of tradition. And that doesn't include Cawdor Castle's own Cruella de Vil.

Campbell names aristocratic (and Eurotrash)names and the book only becomes more engrossing as you go on, so set aside an afternoon or a couple of readings for one of the most fascinating biographies/autobiographies you will ever read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
tree room, tower room
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Aunt Carey, Golden Grove, Father Cinelli, Bonnie Prince Charlie, Uncle Peebles, Uncle George, Jersey Olga, Uncle William, Miss Dunkerley, Moray Firth, Thane of Cawdor, New York, Christmas Day, William Gordon Cumming, Big Wood, Jimmy Dunbar, Cawdor Campbells, Uncle James, Jack Cawdor, Gelli Ayr, King Duncan, Patrick Lichfield, Peggy Forsyth, New Year, John Campbell
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