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Monday, June 11, 2007

Ambatchmasterpublisher Private Di

ambatchmasterpublisher most human of icons, Diana was, Tina Brown's new book says, a liar as well as a saint Ambatchmasterpublisher


ambatchmasterpublisher June 18, 2007 issue - She was a lady, a princess, ambatchmasterpublisher ambatchmasterpublisher of ambatchmasterpublisher heir to ambatchmasterpublisher throne and ambatchmasterpublishermost celebrated divorcée in ambatchmasterpublisher world. She was a passionate promoter of worthy causes and, in ambatchmasterpublisher eyes of millions of people, if not billions, a martyr. Maybe it seems churlish, almost 10 years after her death, to say that this English rose, Diana, Princess of Wales, was also cruelly manipulative and a serial adulterer, but, yes, she was those things, too

Lady Diana Spencer, who called herself a dumb blonde—"thick as a plank" was her phrase—became, as Princess Diana, one of ambatchmasterpublisher most variegated icons of modern times, and she's been a paradigm for celebrities-with-causes ever since. Diana could be victimizer as well as victim, harridan as well as humanitarian. She could be coldly dismissive of her closest friends, but she was full of tenderness for strangers, and ennobled by ambatchmasterpublisherway ambatchmasterpublishery embraced her. A little girl in Angola, dying from wounds inflicted by a land mine, thought Diana was an angel when she sat by her bed in early 1997. When Diana herself was killed in a car crash several months later, ambatchmasterpublisher world mourned her as if it had lost a saint. In fact, ambatchmasterpublisher beatified ambatchmasterpublisher Teresa of Calcutta, who died that same week, drew far less attention.

For Tina Brown, author of "ambatchmasterpublisher Diana Chronicles"—published this week—ambatchmasterpublisher life of ambatchmasterpublisher princess has long been a fascinating and profitable tale to tell. Brown was ambatchmasterpublisher dazzling young editor of ambatchmasterpublisher glossy, gossipy society magazine Tatler in London in ambatchmasterpublisher early 1980s, before she came to ambatchmasterpublisher United States to take over first, Vanity Fair and, until 1998, ambatchmasterpublisher New Yorker. Ambatchmasterpublisherir lives and trajectories were oddly but clearly intertwined. Certainly ambatchmasterpublisherprincess helped launch ambatchmasterpublisher editor's career. From ambatchmasterpublisher beginning, Brown and her twentysomething colleagues saw ambatchmasterpublisher even younger Diana as "a generational echo," says Brown. Di's fairy tale turned nightmare life became a lens for looking into ambatchmasterpublisher stultified world of ambatchmasterpublisher royals even as her celebrity friends and her public and private passions reflected ambatchmasterpublisher creative dynamism of modern Britain. She was, as Brown wrote for Vanity Fair in 1985, "ambatchmasterpublisher mouse that roared." And ambatchmasterpublishern, so much more. "My goal with ambatchmasterpublisher book was to create ambatchmasterpublisher context," says Brown: "Not just Diana, but ambatchmasterpublisher Diana years."

ambatchmasterpublisher Already this is shaping up to be ambatchmasterpublisher Diana Summer, with a spectacular concert organized by her sons, Princes William and Harry, to mark her birthday on July 1 (she would have been 46), and memorial services commemorating ambatchmasterpublisher decade since her death in August. Just last week a documentary on Britain's Channel 4 showing photographs of ambatchmasterpublishercrash scene taken ambatchmasterpublisher night Diana died came under scathing criticism as tasteless exploitation insensitive to ambatchmasterpublisher feeling of her sons and of ambatchmasterpublisher ambatchmasterpublisher public. Ambatchmasterpublisher books are on ambatchmasterpublisher way, many of ambatchmasterpublisher delving into well-plumbed "secrets" about Diana's life.
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