One day the Queen encounters, by chance, a mobile library parked by Buckingham Palace. A few members of the staff rely on this outreach program, but a visit by royalty is a rare and unexpected event. The Queen feels that she should check out a book to show her support. But the Queen doesn’t know much about books. What should she do?
Thus begins Alan Bennett’s clever and entertaining story The Uncommon Reader. Bennett is best known for his dramatic works, and has also written for television and recently published a memoir, Untold Stories, which was a bestseller in the UK. But Bennett is also a brilliant author of fiction, as demonstrated by this charming account of a monarch coming to grips with that ultimate democratizing force, the written word.
The Queen decides to read the book she has borrowed. After all, the Queen is always focused on duty and decorum, and returning it unread would seem rather irresponsible, no? But this one book leads to others, and they open up more doors, and before long, she is the leading reader in the land. Why? After a lifetime of being insulated and protected from the flow and flux and unpredictability of real life, she has finally found a way of bypassing, at least through books, all these barriers and finding out what really happens in the world.
The Queen has a companion in her literary adventures, a low-level kitchen worker at the palace named Norman. Norman also loves books, but has a strong preference for the works of homosexual authors. Through his guidance, the Queen is soon checking out J.R. Ackerley, E.M Forster, Marcel Proust and a host of other writers that she might otherwise have missed. When she meets the President of France, she asks about Genet, rather than inquire into the details of Anglo-French monetary arrangements.








Article comments
1 - James Carson
I'm very-much looking forward to reading this one, and your review has confirmed that it's worth the wait.
2 - Natalie Bennett
This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net , which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States, and to Boston.com. Nice work!
3 - miriam
I found this book delightful. Bennett is a wonderful stylist, witty and urbane and very, very British.