C‘is who looks The Crown to learn about the history of English royalty, those who dream of Buckingham Palace tiaras and those who have not yet recovered from Megxit. The truth is that the English monarchy continues to be the most elegant, controversial and irresistible reality show on the planet. Behind the impeccable protocol hide passions, rivalries, political strategies and characters that seem to have come out of a novel. And in fact, often, they end up in books. From pop curiosities about Elizabeth II to jewels symbolizing royal power, up to the women who changed the destiny of Charles III and the hypotheses of a Great Britain without a monarchy, these four titles offer different ways to enter the world of the Windsors.

1/ Books about English royalty: The Queen in pocket by Eva Grippa and Ivan Canu

With The Queen in Pocket, Eva Grippa and the illustrator Ivan Canu construct a surprising, ironic and pop portrait of Elizabeth II. The book was created on the occasion of the centenary of the birth of the sovereign and collects one hundred anecdotes and curiosities that show the more human side of the most famous queen of the twentieth century. It is not the classic celebratory biography: it alternates historical episodes with details of customs, court rituals and small private eccentricities.

Ivan Canu’s illustrations transform the book into a sort of visual atlas of contemporary royal culture. A perfect manual for those who want to approach the figure of Elizabeth II lightly but without superficiality, discovering how much the sovereign has become a pop icon as well as an institutional one.

2/ Books on English royalty: The Queen’s Jewels by Marina Minelli

If there is an elegant way to tell the story of the British monarchy, is to do it through her jewels. Marina Minelli, one of the leading Italian experts on royal houses, in The Queen’s jewels accompanies the reader inside the extraordinary collection of Elizabeth II. Tiaras, brooches, necklaces and tiaras become tools to tell about dynastic marriages, court rivalries, wars, inheritances and political transformations. Each jewel holds a story: behind a sparkling crown, family dramas, diplomatic strategies and forgotten female figures often emerge.

Minelli does not limit himself to the aesthetic description of the jewels, but uses them to explain the symbolic language of the English monarchy, where even an apparently decorative detail can become a political message.

4 books to read about English royalty

3/ Books on English royalty: Exit Queen – Checkback to the Queen by Marco Ubezio and Francesco Spartà

With Exit Queen – Check to the QueenMarco Ubezio and Francesco Spartà instead they choose the path of political fiction. The novel imagines a scenario as provocative as it is plausible: a referendum on the British monarchy during the final years of Elizabeth II’s reign. The question at the center of the book is simple but very powerful: Can the monarchy really survive in the era of populism and direct democracy?

Between institutional tensions, economic crises and media clashes, the novel constructs a political thriller that reflects on the fragility of the symbolic power of the Crown. Despite being a narrative work, the book raises the question of the role of the Windsors in modern society.

4/ Books on English royalty: Carlo’s women by Ilaria Grillini

(Photo by KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

With Carlo’s women, Ilaria Grillini finally moves the attention on Charles III and on the female figures who marked his public and private life. From the complex relationship with Diana Spencer to the bond with Camilla Parker Bowles, the book tells how the sovereign’s romantic relationships influenced the very image of the monarchy.

More than just a crime story, the book explores the media and political weight of the women around Charles: often decisive figures in shaping the public perception of the royal family. Through loves, scandals and reconciliations, the portrait of a monarchy emerges which in recent decades has had to deal with the constant judgment of public opinion and the global media.

4 books on English royalty, a pop fresco

The 4 must-read books of the week all show very different perspectives on the British monarchy: the pop and illustrated tale of Elizabeth II, the historical fascination of royal jewels, the political dystopia of an anti-monarchist referendum and the more human and sentimental side of Charles III. Put together, they make up a complete mosaic of the English Crown: an ancient institution that continues to reinvent itself through history, pop culture, politics and media entertainment.

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