H.R.H. by Danielle Steel

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(Hardcover - Bargain)

  • Pub. Date: October 2006
  • 336pp

    Reader Rating: (34 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Rainy Days" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2006
    • Publisher: Dell Publishing
    • Format: Hardcover, 336pp

    Synopsis

    In a novel where ancient traditions conflict with reality and the pressures of modern life, a young European princess proves that simplicity, courage, and dignity win the day and forever alter her world.

    In blue jeans and a pullover, Princess Christianna is a young woman of her times: born in Europe, educated in America, worried about the future of the world she lives in, responsible beyond her years. Christianna is the only daughter of the Reigning Prince of a European nation that takes its royalty seriously–and her father has ironclad plans for Christianna’s life, a burden that is almost unbearable.

    Now, after four years at Berkeley, life in her father’s palace cannot distract Christianna from what she sees outside the kingdom–the suffering of children, the ravages of terrorism and disease. Determined to make a difference in the world, she persuades His Royal Highness, her father, to let her volunteer for the Red Cross in East Africa. And for Christianna, a journey of discovery, change, and awakening begins.

    Under a searing East African sun, Christianna plunges into the dusty, bustling life of an international relief camp, finding a passion and a calling among the brave doctors and volunteers. Finally free from the scrutiny of her royal life, Christianna struggles to keep her identity a secret from her new friends and coworkers–even from Parker Williams, the young doctor from Doctors Without Borders who works alongside Christianna and shares her dedication to healing. But as violence approaches and invades the camp, and the pressures of her royal life beckon her home, Christianna’s struggle for freedom takes anextraordinary turn. By a simple twist of fate, in one shocking moment, Christianna’s life is changed forever–in ways she never could have foreseen.

    From the splendor of a prince’s palace to the chaos of war-torn nations, Danielle Steel takes us into fascinating new worlds. Filled with unforgettable images and a remarkable cast of characters, H.R.H. is a novel of the conflict between old and new worlds, responsibility versus freedom, and duty versus love.


    From the Hardcover edition.

    Publishers Weekly

    Poor Christianna, princess of Liechtenstein. Fettered by duty and tradition, her existence is an "achingly boring" slog of ribbon cuttings and state dinners, further straitened by her ever-present retinue of bodyguards and the specter of paparazzi. She longs to do something meaningful with her life; opportunity knocks when she gets a chance to volunteer at a Red Cross AIDS clinic in Africa. Bodyguards in tow, Christianna ministers to the diseased, while colleagues and African peasants alike bask in her royal glow: after all, "she was both grace and gentleness itself." There's even a handsome Doctor Without Borders to fall in love with, but alas! her father forbids her to marry a "commoner." There are further obstacles, and further global adventures. The cast is bland, the incidental shopping perfunctory, the sex tasteful and appropriate. Christianna's cousin Victoria ditzy and decadent in her jeans and tiara makes a tantalizing cameo, but Steel (550 million copies sold) spends a great deal of time on the details of Christianna's jet-set activism ("she stayed away from dairy products in Africa"). (Oct. 31) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Danielle Steel has become more of a legend than any one of her books, which never fail to make the bestseller lists. Something of Steel's refinement and gentility transfers to her prose as her heroines enjoy enviable triumphs over inevitable tragedies.

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    Customer Reviews

    Danielle Steel does it again!by chelsea00

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    June 15, 2009: This is a wonderful book. Gives a look into the life of a princess, shows there is a lot more to it than beautiful gowns and dinner parties. All of the characters were very likeable. I wish she would have gone into more detail about what happened with the characters at the end of the book. I suppose she left that up to our imagination. I would recommend this book.

    I Also Recommend: Ransom, His Bright Light, The Cottage, Johnny Angel, Bungalow 2.

    Typical Danielle Steeleby HairTeacher

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    March 09, 2009: This was a good and easy read. I really couldn't put the book down, but I really didn't like the end. It seemed like it really didn't finalize the story and left you hanging, even though you knew the outcome.


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