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Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret Hardcover – August 7, 2018

3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars 3,275 ratings

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“Rollicking, irresistible, un-put-downable . . . For anyone . . . who swooned to Netflix’s The Crown, this book will be manna from heaven.” ―Hamish Bowles, Vogue

Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a brilliant, eccentric treat. ―Anna Mundow, The Wall Street Journal

I ripped through the book with the avidity of Margaret attacking her morning vodka and orange juice . . . The wisdom of the book, and the artistry, is in how Brown subtly expands his lens from Margaret’s misbehavior . . . to those who gawked at her, who huddled around her, pens poised over their diaries, hoping for the show she never denied them. ―Parul Sehgal, The New York Times

“Brown has done something astonishing: He makes the reader care, even sympathize, with perhaps the last subject worthy of such affection . . . His book is big fun, equal measures insightful and hysterical.
―Karen Heller, The Washington Post

A witty and profound portrait of the most talked-about English royal


She made John Lennon blush and Marlon Brando tongue-tied. She iced out Princess Diana and humiliated Elizabeth Taylor. Andy Warhol photographed her. Jack Nicholson offered her cocaine. Gore Vidal revered her. Francis Bacon heckled her. Peter Sellers was madly in love with her. For Pablo Picasso, she was the object of sexual fantasy.

Princess Margaret aroused passion and indignation in equal measures. To her friends, she was witty and regal. To her enemies, she was rude and demanding. In her 1950s heyday, she was seen as one of the most glamorous and desirable women in the world. By the time of her death in 2002, she had come to personify disappointment. One friend said he had never known an unhappier woman. The tale of Princess Margaret is Cinderella in reverse: hope dashed, happiness mislaid, life mishandled.

Such an enigmatic and divisive figure demands a reckoning that is far from the usual fare. Combining interviews, parodies, dreams, parallel lives, diaries, announcements, lists, catalogues, and essays, Craig Brown’s
Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a kaleidoscopic experiment in biography and a witty meditation on fame and art, snobbery and deference, bohemia and high society.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A New York Times Bestseller | Winner of the James Tait Black Prize for Biography | A Guardian Book of the Year | A Times Book of the Year | A Sunday Times Book of the Year | A Daily Mail Book of the Year | Best summer books 2018, Newsday | A New York Times Notable Book of 2018 | An NPR Book of the Year | A Washington Post Notable Book of the Year

"A dishy dive into the real deal."
Vogue

"[A] supercharged biography."
Vanity Fair

“Rollicking, irresistible, un-put-downable . . . For anyone . . . who swooned to Netflix’s
The Crown, this book will be manna from heaven.” ―Hamish Bowles, Vogue

"
Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a brilliant, eccentric treat." ―Anna Mundow, The Wall Street Journal

"Craig Brown's
Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is a royal biography unlike any another. Come for the Instagram-worth cover, and stay for a few chapters where Brown veers away from history to dwell in what could have been for the Queen's sister." ―Caroline Hallemann, Town & Country

"Brown ignores all the starchy obligations of biography and adopts a form of his own to trap the past and ensnare the reader ― even
this reader, so determinedly indifferent to the royals. I ripped through the book with the avidity of Margaret attacking her morning vodka and orange juice . . . The wisdom of the book, and the artistry, is in how Brown subtly expands his lens from Margaret’s misbehavior ― sometimes campy, sometimes desperate ― to those who gawked at her, who huddled around her, pens poised over their diaries, hoping for the show she never denied them." ―Parul Sehgal, The New York Times

"Craig Brown’s delectable
Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret is not a novel, though its subject seems like a sublime work of fiction, too imperious to be true . . . Brown has done something astonishing: He makes the reader care, even sympathize, with perhaps the last subject worthy of such affection... His book is big fun, equal measures insightful and hysterical." ―Karen Heller, The Washington Post

"This unsettling, incisive and honest book also manages to be laugh-out-loud funny, and is a startlingly original contribution to the genre of biography."
―Mary Ann Gwinn, The Seattle Times

“In
Ninety-Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret, award-winning journalist Craig Brown offers an acerbic biography of the star-crossed princess, one that is hilarious and bittersweet in turns . . . Brown’s book is highly recommended for all American royal-watchers.” ―Catherine Hollis, BookPage

“An original, memorable and substantial achievement.”
Times Literary Supplement

"Brown’s portrait of Margaret is by turns funny and moving, and every page contains at least one telling detail about what makes Margaret such a compelling avatar of royalty."
Constance Gracy, Vox

"In addition to giving us a fantastical portrait of a woman painted by many hands, this wicked, thoroughly entertaining book presents a rich, unwholesome slice of social and cultural history of Britain, especially from the 1950s to 1970s."
―Katharine Powers, Minneapolis Star Tribune

“A biography teeming with the joyous, the ghastly and clinically fascinating.”
The Times (London)

“Hilarious and eye-opening.”
The Observer (London)

“Hugely entertaining . . . Brilliantly written, with a wonderful sardonic edge but also a thoughtful, moving tone.”
The Spectator

About the Author

Craig Brown is a prolific journalist and author. He has been writing his parodic diary in Private Eye since 1989. He is the only person ever to have won three different Press Awards―for best humorist, columnist, and critic―in the same year. He has been a columnist for The Guardian, The Times (London), The Spectator, and The Daily Telegraph, among others. He currently writes for The Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday. His New York Times bestseller, Hello Goodbye Hello was translated into ten languages.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Farrar, Straus and Giroux; First Edition (August 7, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 432 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0374906041
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0374906047
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.45 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.37 x 1.68 x 9.38 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars 3,275 ratings

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Customer reviews

3.7 out of 5 stars
3,275 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the storytelling fascinating and interesting, providing good insight into Princess Margaret's life. They describe her as beautiful and innovative in an interesting style. However, some readers feel the book leaves them without a clear understanding of the princess, making it difficult to separate fact from fiction at times. The characterization is described as mean, unkind, and unpleasant. Opinions differ on readability - some find it entertaining and enjoyable, while others consider it boring and hard to follow. There are mixed reviews on the biography quality - some find it nice and great, while others say it's poorly written and tough to read.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

28 customers mention "Storytelling"24 positive4 negative

Customers find the storytelling engaging and interesting. It provides good insight into the life of the woman, combining interviews with speculative elements. They describe the book as humorous, racy, and informative, covering all aspects of her life. However, some readers would like more history and information about the royal family. Overall, the book is well-researched and covers all aspects of the subject's life.

"...The book is the most irreverent royal biography I have read. It is the very antithesis of a hagiography...." Read more

"...Some of them were fascinating and gave good insight into the life of this woman, perennially the number 2 in her family...." Read more

"...The author made what could have been a dry biography into a most interesting story of a persons life with his unique style of storytelling...." Read more

"Very interesting facts about Princess Margaret, it’s not set up as a story to read it’s just random events. I find it hard to keep my interest" Read more

8 customers mention "Beauty"8 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's beauty. They find it insightful and engaging, with an innovative writing style that creates a good picture of Princess Margaret without using direct descriptions. The photos included are also appreciated.

"...Often Princess Margaret was elegant, vivacious, and entertaining in a way her dutiful older sister could never be, but at other times she could be..." Read more

"...Craig Brown's "glimpses" puts together a good picture of Princess Margaret without resorting to a straight biography...." Read more

"...I highly recommend this. Its humorous, racy, informative, inside look at how the royal family does things. I was sad to see it end." Read more

"...She was beautiful but that seems to be the only thing anyone can agree to." Read more

70 customers mention "Readability"36 positive34 negative

Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it entertaining and engaging, while others find it boring, unoriginal, and hard to follow.

"...In conclusion, I found this book tremendously interesting and entertaining. However, reading it for me was a kind of guilty pleasure...." Read more

"...Chapter 19, for example is beyond absurd. She was never married to Picasso and yet he writes about their fictional relationship as if it’s fact...." Read more

"I enjoyed this book immensely. There are 99 "chapters" although some are one page long. Each offers a real or fictionalized glimpse at the princess...." Read more

"...Honestly, it’s quite mean. I found the book to be disappointing and boring to read as well." Read more

28 customers mention "Readable"17 positive11 negative

Customers have different views on the book's readable quality. Some find it engaging and well-written, with moments of humor and laugh-out-loud moments. Others find it poorly written and hard to follow, with rambling sections and lack of editing.

"...Although the book is highly readable and entertaining one must wonder whether it can really qualify as a biography at all...." Read more

"...for the most part but unfortunately the book suffers from a lack of careful editing, e.g.:1...." Read more

"...Often Princess Margaret was elegant, vivacious, and entertaining in a way her dutiful older sister could never be, but at other times she could be..." Read more

"...I highly recommend this. Its humorous, racy, informative, inside look at how the royal family does things. I was sad to see it end." Read more

7 customers mention "Biography quality"4 positive3 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the biography. Some find it a nice, great biography about a celebrity. Others say it's not a traditional biography and incomplete.

"...A nice biography about the complex princess always in her sister's shadow." Read more

"...was aware from the interview that "99 Glimpses" is not a traditional biography...." Read more

"...The best book about British Royals ever written, by anyone, since the War of the Roses." Read more

"...The title might have clued you into the idea that this is not a traditional biography." Read more

14 customers mention "Intelligence"3 positive11 negative

Customers find the book lacks depth and clarity about the Princess. They find it difficult to separate fact from fiction, making it hard to follow the narrative. The writing is poor and difficult to understand, with repetitive information that seems like third-hand sources. Overall, readers feel the book provides little new insight and is a waste of time.

"...However, the book leaves you without a clear understanding of the Princess herself; on what made her tick, and just focusing as it does on the..." Read more

"...I listened to this via audio and it was difficult at times to separate the fact from the speculative parts." Read more

"Was not what I thought. Haven't finished yet but it seems like third hand information and doesn't make sense at times jumping all over." Read more

"...She had a privileged but claustrophobic life. Intelligent, beautiful and miserable due to her position in the family...." Read more

11 customers mention "Characterization"0 positive11 negative

Customers find the characterization in the book unkind and negative. They describe her as unhappy, unpleasant, and rude. The book is described as snobby, demanding, and misogynistic.

"...She comes off as arrogant, bossy, rude, but there are glimpses of a woman who had lived a very limited life, not always by her own choice...." Read more

"...It is extremely negative and paints her as a horrible person. Honestly, it’s quite mean...." Read more

"...it seems to concentrate on is how spoiled and snobby, demanding and rude she was. You can just hear the British upper-crust accent as you read...." Read more

"...than watching The Crown, it was a bit much for me, as it was not a positive take on her, but rather a demeaning and condescending take...." Read more

7 customers mention "Pacing"0 positive7 negative

Customers dislike the pacing of the book. They find the main character unflattering, spoiled, and demanding. The portrayal is described as demeaning and condescending. Readers mention that the book takes 400 pages to say the same things over and over again.

"...Brown is not gentle with the main character but tries to give a fairly well-rounded picture of the Princess...." Read more

"...Classless and common parading as a Princess...." Read more

"...-all, but mostly what it seems to concentrate on is how spoiled and snobby, demanding and rude she was...." Read more

"...me, as it was not a positive take on her, but rather a demeaning and condescending take...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2018
    I have read dozens of biographies of British and Continental royal personages. This biography of Princess Margaret is certainly the most unusual royal biography I have read. I think it is also the most amusing and entertaining. Most royal biographies, especially authorized ones, are hagiographies. Examples of this genre are William Shawcross’s “The Queen Mother” (2009) and Pope-Hennessy’s “Queen Mary” (1959).

    Craig Brown in writing this biography of Princess Margaret has broken with tradition in two mains respects. The book is the most irreverent royal biography I have read. It is the very antithesis of a hagiography. He has also created a new and possibly unique biographical style. Instead of the usual cradle to grave narrative, the reader is presented with ninety-nine glimpses from Princess Margaret’s life. Most are glimpses of her at unimportant social events that tend to highlight her moody, capricious, inconsiderate and often haughty behavior.

    Although the book is highly readable and entertaining one must wonder whether it can really qualify as a biography at all. Although I understand the author’s boredom with conventional biographies, royal and otherwise, I think the presentation of this book deprives it of any historical significance. A reader unfamiliar with the story of Princess Margaret would be left with a very incomplete picture of her indeed. Where, for example, is Princess Margaret as a mother?

    The Princess had two children with Anthony Armstrong-Jones, later Lord Snowdon. They are Viscount Linley and Lady Sarah Chatto and she also had three grandchildren. Yet there are hardly any references to them in this book and there is no description of the relationship Princess Margaret had with them. The only reference to Viscount Linley is in connection with the auction of his mother’s large collection of jewelry and other possessions after her death in which he is portrayed as a rather cold-blooded individual who did not hesitate to try to sell at auction even her 1957 portrait by Annigoni and was forced to buy it back from the auction house only after pressure was brought to bear by his father and sister.

    We learn virtually nothing of Princess Margaret’s relationship with her sister, Queen Elizabeth II. Although Princess Margaret had a phone on her desk with a direct line to the Queen’s apartments at Buckingham Palace and although the two apparently chatted by phone almost every morning, few details of what was by all accounts a very loving relationship are portrayed.

    More details are provided about the relationship between Princess Margaret and her mother, Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. They at one time both resided at Clarence House on different floors and communicated by letters delivered from one to the other by liveried footmen. The author describes some interactions between the pair that suggest that Princess Margaret’s treatment of her mother was often disrespectful and even cruel, but the Queen Mother seems to have accepted all the slights and insults from her daughter with the grace and dignity she always displayed.

    Towards the end of the book the author indulges in “what ifs.” He places emphasis on what if Princess Margaret had been the first-born child of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, the current Queen, had been the second child. He suggests quite correctly I believe that Princess Margaret could never have carried off the royal job with the immense dignity and devotion of Queen Elizabeth II. However, this does not take into consideration the fact that the Queen was raised with the idea that she might one day inherit the throne, particularly after King Edward VIII’s abdication, and Princess Margaret was left to fulfill a secondary role.

    A more important “what if” is I think would Princess Margaret have been a different person if her marriage to her first love Group Captain Peter Townsend had not been prevented by the British establishment? The answer to that question cannot possibly ever be known. Would she have grown bored with him or would she have settled into a comfortable and conventional royal life since the Group Captain had been a favorite of George VI and was well acquainted with royalty and royal protocol? My sense is that Princess Margaret was left embittered by being deprived of an opportunity for a happy married life and that all her undesirable characteristics that the author shows such delight in portraying were the result of that early bad experience.

    The author points out that perhaps Princess Margaret’s most prominent characteristic was her unshakeable sense of being fully royal. She delighted in her title “Her Royal Highness, the Princess Margaret” and would often rebuke even close friends who failed to treat her with due deference. At dinner parties and functions of various types she would often use as an icebreaker the fact that she was the only person in the realm who could claim to be both the daughter of a King and the sister of a Queen.

    The question that arises though is can her sense of being royal be regarded as a defect? Today even among the British people there seems to be a desire that members of the Royal family be just like them and have the common touch. This explains the enormous popularity of Prince Harry who likes to be just one of the boys and has entered a marriage that among old established royalty would be unthinkable. However, what is the purpose of Royalty if they are going to be just like everyone else?

    The author takes a malicious delight throughout this book in pointing to Princess Margaret’s often bad behavior. It is true that Princess Margaret liked the arts and bohemia and therefore would often socialize with a rather raffish crowd. Therefore, she wanted to both have her royal cake and eat it. The author also tends to poke fun at the Princess’s appearance drawing attention to the fact that some called her “The Royal Dwarf” because of her small stature. However, the illustrations provided, except those towards the later part of her life, show a truly beautiful woman superbly dressed and coiffed and with a wonderful smile. I saw Princess Margaret once when she came to open a Clinic at a hospital where I worked, and she was the very epitome of what one might consider a Royal personage.

    In conclusion, I found this book tremendously interesting and entertaining. However, reading it for me was a kind of guilty pleasure. I think the author has been somewhat unfair to Princess Margaret and the definitive biography of her remains to be written. She deserves more credit than she gets in this amusingly malicious book.
    113 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2019
    I enjoyed this book immensely. There are 99 "chapters" although some are one page long. Each offers a real or fictionalized glimpse at the princess. Would be a good vacation or beach read.
    If you are looking for a full biography of Princess Margaret, this may not be the book for you. I had read several biographies of her prior to reading this book.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2018
    Being the Queen's younger sister isn't all it's cracked up to be. Often Princess Margaret was elegant, vivacious, and entertaining in a way her dutiful older sister could never be, but at other times she could be boring, snobby, and insufferable. Craig Brown has produced an account which is as mercurial as the Princess herself: often fascinating and hilarious, but at other times stuffy and frankly, tedious.

    This is not a standard biography but a series of 99 short chapters or vignettes, arranged in roughly chronological order, designed to shed some daylight on the Princess' life. Some are obviously fiction, like the description of her marriage to Pablo Picasso or the 1977 Christmas speech from "Queen Margaret I." Others are drawn from more traditional biographies of the Princess or her family members, and still others are obviously based on gossip passed from person to person within the Princess' circle of friends and acquaintances. There's a lot of repetition: it grew wearisome to read through all the nasty jokes the Princess' husband Lord Snowdon used to play on her, and I really don't see the point of summarizing obituaries or of a detailed list of every single item sold off by the Princess' children after her death in 2002, or indeed of reprinting advertisements listing the amenities of the Princess' former vacation spot on Mustique. But perhaps that was Brown's point: that Princess Margaret, despite being an intelligent and often witty woman, led an empty and tedious life.
    28 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2019
    I loved this book. Absolutely adored it. But after looking at the range of reviews on Amazon, it's clear "Ninety Nine Glimpses of Princess Margaret", didn't charm most of its readers. Oh well, you can't please everybody...

    Craig Brown's biography of Margaret is unlike any other bio I've read. Split into 99 chapters - some very short - Brown gives a fairly non-linear look at "PM" life. Most of the "glimpses" are straight prose but some are written from an imaginary basis. Those "fiction" are pretty apparent, but sometimes the reader can be confused as to point of view/identity of speaker. Brown is not gentle with the main character but tries to give a fairly well-rounded picture of the Princess. She comes off as arrogant, bossy, rude, but there are glimpses of a woman who had lived a very limited life, not always by her own choice.

    Margaret Windsor was a woman around whom life occurred. She wasn't allowed to marry the man she loved - Peter Townsend - but Townsend turned out to be a bit of cad. Would her marriage have lasted if she and Townsend had married? Her marriage to Antony Armstrong-Jones was a horrific mess which ended badly. Her choice of men and friends was often skewed by her position in society - "get close to me...but not too close."

    Craig Brown's "glimpses" puts together a good picture of Princess Margaret without resorting to a straight biography. I'd advise you to read all the Amazon reviews - the 5 stars through the 1 - before you buy this book.
    9 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Tone
    5.0 out of 5 stars Everything you always wanted to know about Princess Margaret.
    Reviewed in Brazil on May 9, 2021
    Very good book, hilarious at times, when you start reading it you try not to stop because it's enthralling and tells us a lot of episodes of the life and times of Princess Margaret. Worth reading, very good read, coming from a great deal of persons, very trustworthy stories. The bibliography is gigantic and I've read at least two of the books mentioned and also enjoyed them very much. If you want to know all about Princess Margaret buy it now and read it, you will thrive and it will be very difficult for you to put the book down!
  • Bonna5300
    5.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and no hagiography!
    Reviewed in Germany on May 14, 2021
    A really good read! Very funny, gives you quite an insight, full of interesting and also entertaining facts - a glimpse behind the scenes. And it makes you laugh, at least from time to time. On the other hand the behaviour of this spoiled and utterly selfish princess is really indigestible. But reading about the syncophants surrounding her you feel a very tiny bit of pity and sympathy. She really seems to have lived a life without meaning. Absolutely no hagiography!
  • Fastidious Kindle Addict
    2.0 out of 5 stars Somewhat Dull
    Reviewed in India on September 9, 2019
    Not very interesting. Just a collection of incidents and attributes taken from various sources.
  • Peace & Quiet
    5.0 out of 5 stars Delicious, hilarious, an artifact of the times
    Reviewed in France on July 13, 2019
    Parfait--
  • OG
    4.0 out of 5 stars Interesante
    Reviewed in Spain on August 5, 2018
    Responde al título, los que busquen una biografía al uso no la encontraran, sí anécdotas y otros episodios de su vida