Shooting Victoria Audiobook By Paul Thomas Murphy cover art

Shooting Victoria

Madness, Mayhem, and the Rebirth of the British Monarchy

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Shooting Victoria

By: Paul Thomas Murphy
Narrated by: Mark Whitten
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From a hunchbacked dwarf to a paranoid poet-assassin, a history of Victorian England as seen through the numerous assassination attempts on Queen Victoria while she ruled the British empire. During Queen Victoria’s 64 years on the British throne, no fewer than eight attempts were made on her life. Murphy follows each would-be assassin and the repercussions of their actions, illuminating daily life in Victorian England, the development of the monarchy under Queen Victoria, and the evolution of the attacks in light of changing social issues and technology.

There was Edward Oxford, a bartender who dreamed of becoming an admiral, who was simply shocked when his attempt to shoot the pregnant Queen and Prince consort made him a madman in the world’s eyes. There was hunchbacked John Bean, who dreamed of historical notoriety in a publicized treason trial, and William Hamilton, forever scarred by the ravages of the Irish Potato Famine. Roderick MacLean enabled Victoria to successfully strike insanity pleas from Britain’s legal process. Most threatening of all were the “dynamitards” who targeted her Majesty’s Golden Jubilee - signaling the advent of modern terrorism with their publicly focused attack.

From these cloak-and-dagger plots to Victoria’s brilliant wit and steadfast courage, Shooting Victoria is historical narrative at its most thrilling, complete with astute insight into how these attacks actually revitalized the British crown at a time when monarchy was quickly becoming unpopular abroad. While thrones across Europe toppled, the Queen’s would-be assassins contributed greatly to the preservation of the monarchy and to the stability that it enjoys today. After all, as Victoria herself noted, “It is worth being shot at - to see how much one is loved."

©2012 Paul Thomas Murphy (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
Biographies & Memoirs Europe Great Britain Politics & Activism Royalty Social Sciences Violence in Society

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Interesting study of all the would-be assassins of Queen Victoria and how they shaped England's treason and criminal insanity laws. Performed by Mark Whitten who does great voices of the assassins and Queen Victoria.

Study of Royal Assassins

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Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?

Yes. An interesting examination of Victorian England and the multiple assassination attempts against Victoria but it suffers a bit from the narration.

What didn’t you like about Mark Whitten’s performance?

Jarring mispronunciations and accents/acting. Whitten's voice is pleasant enough but this particular audiobook probably would have benefited from an English reader.

Interesting story, wrong reader

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This was an interesting book about the seven attempts on Queen Victoria's life and how they affected her and changed her kingdom. It is of note that each attempt strengthened her popularity and led to changes in the laws and policing of the era. Bios of the seven are included, as well as the state of the nation and monarchy at the time of the attempts. Major events of the Queen's life are covered as well. The research on this book is incredible, it really gives a feel for the era. I read this book using immersion reading, while listening to the audio book version. Narration was rote, bland and dull. The attempts to read portions in a British accent were sad as well. A British narrator should have been chosen.

Thorough Account of the 7 Attempts

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I found this a fascinating book. Murphy goes into detail about each of the eight people that attempted to assassinate Queen Victoria. He also covers some detail about Queen Victoria and her family that helped to create a picture of that period in time. Each of the men that that attempted the assassination were found to be mentally ill. I discovered a pearl of information I was unaware of, Daniel McNaughton was one of the men (he also tried to Kill the P.M. Peel) and he was acquitted in 1843. The first man was tried and executed under the High Treason Law the next also acted like the first and reveled in the attention he was paid. The government then tried to find a way of dealing with the mentally ill so they would not get the attention they craved and not be changed with treason. Everyone was unhappy with how McNaughton was handled. So Queen Victoria and her counsel posed a series of hypothetical questions about the deference of insanity defenses to a panel of Judges. The result from the Judges became known as the McNaughton Rule and is still used today throughout the commonwealth and the USA. It is the standard test for criminal liability in relation to mental disorders. It is also a shame that in 173 year plus we not improved the mental disease problems related to crime or the care and treatment. The book was well research but did ramble a bit in the middle of the book. Mark Whitten did an acceptable job narrating the book. I think a British narrator would have been more appropriate choice to have narrated the book. Overall I learned a great deal from the book. If you are interested in history this is a book for you.

Assassination attemps on Queen Victoria

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Would you consider the audio edition of Shooting Victoria to be better than the print version?

This book is well written and very well narrated. It successfully weaves together a history of the Victorian era, a sort of joint biography of Victoria and Albert, the story of the evolution of policing, and a number of CSI-like crime stories. I was afraid all that would be too much to get in a not-so-very long book, but it was not the case. I enjoyed each episode (which is clustered around one of the six or seven assassination attempts) as a stand-alone and the weaving of all of them together to make an entertaining history.

a great slice of history book

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