
The Three Emperors: Three Cousins, Three Empires and the Road to World War One
Miranda Carter
Discover the juicy, funny story of the three dysfunctional rulers of Germany, Russia and Great Britain at the turn of the last century, combined with a study of the larger forces around them.
Three cousins. Three Emperors. And the road to ruin.
As cousins, George V, Kaiser Wilhelm II and the last Tsar Nicholas II should have been friends - but they happened also to rule Europe's three most powerful states. This potent combination together with their own destructive personalities - petty, insecure, bullying, absurdly obsessive (stamp collecting, uniforms) - led not only to their own dramatic fallouts and falls from grace, but also to the outbreak of the First World War.
Miranda Carter's riveting account of how three men who should have known better helped bring down an entire world is a gripping story of abdication, betrayal and murder.
'Fascinating. A wonderfully fresh and beautifully choreographed work of history' Mail on Sunday
'Miranda Carter's story is full of vivid quotations . . . a romp though the palaces of Europe in their last decades before Armageddon' Sunday Times
'Fascinating. Carter is a gifted storyteller and has written a very readable account' Independent
'That these three absurd men could ever have held the fate of Europe in their hands is a fact as hilarious as it is terrifying. I haven't enjoyed a historical biography this much since Lytton Strachey's Victoria' Zadie Smith
Product Details
About Miranda Carter
Reviews for The Three Emperors: Three Cousins, Three Empires and the Road to World War One
Craig Brown
Mail on Sunday
Carter draws masterful portraits of her subjects and tells the complicated story of Europe's failing international relations well...a highly readable and well-documented account
Spectator
Absorbing. Carter has a good eye for a quote and an ability to bring various personalities to life. A convincing and considerable achievement
Sarah Bradford
Literary Review
Carter's account of how an already dysfunctional family turned toxic is fresh and enjoyable...timely and welcome
Guardian
Miranda Carter's story is full of vivid quotations...a romp though the palaces of Europe in their last decades before Armageddon
Sunday Times
Well-paced, a thoroughly polished, professional piece of work. A macabre family saga
A. N. Wilson
Evening Standard
An entertaining study of power and personality portrays the strutting absurdity and grotesque glamour of the last emperors on the eve of catastrophe
Simon Sebag Montefiore
Financial Times
Fascinating. Carter is a gifted storyteller and has written a very readable account
Independent
Carter's intelligent, entertainging and informative book folds dynastic and political narratives into a panoramic account of Europe's road to war
London Review of Books
That these three absurd men could ever have held the fate of Europe in their hands is a fact as hilarious as it is terrifying. I haven't enjoyed a historical biography this much since Lytton Strachey's Victoria
Zadie Smith Miranda Carter writes with lusty humour, has a fresh clarifying intelligence, and a sharp eye for telling details. This is traditional narrative history with a 21st-century zing. A real corker of a book
History Today
A highly original way of looking at the years that led up to 1914
Antonia Fraser
Sunday Telegraph Books of the Year
Carter deftly interpolates history with psychobiography to provide a damning indictment of monarchy in all its forms
Will Self
New Statesmen Books of the Year
A depiction of bloated power and outsize personalities in which Carter picks apart the strutting absurdity of the last emperors on the eve of catastrophe
Financial Times Books of the Year
Takes what should have been a daunting subject and through sheer wit and narrative élan turns it into engaging drama. Carter has a notable gift for characterisation
Jonathan Coe
Guardian Books of the Year