H.R.H.
Author: Danielle Steel ISBN: 0440242045 10/2007 CONTEMPORARY Publisher: DELL (Reprint)
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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 an extraordinary turn. By a simple twist of fate, in one shocking moment, Christianna’s life is changed forever—in ways she never could have foreseen. |
RRAH's THOUGHTS AND PONDERINGS:
It is refreshing to read a romance with such a strong social conscience. HRH by Danielle Steel, although fiction, parallels reality closely enough that it could easily be mistaken for something out of the day's news. Christianna, Ms. Steel's heroine, is a real-life princess and could have chosen to live a life of ease and leisure. Or, she could have succumbed to any of the myriad of temptations that money affords. Instead, she decides to spend her time in a remote area of the world, helping some of the neediest citizens on the planet. Putting herself in great peril, she works tirelessly. Her reward is finding love amidst the poverty, a love that can never, because of her station in life, be embraced.
Although this is a classic story of commoner and royalty meeting and falling in love, the way in which its written makes it hardly a fairytale. Murder, starvation, sickness and the indignities of a less-than-civilized world put this princess in the trenches of life. She is a strong heroine who teaches everyone she meets a lesson or two about a life of service. I very much enjoyed reading HRH. This is not the usual Danielle Steel offering and I found it to be a wonderful change of pace.
Kay James |