
Sisi's life really was a soap opera, full of forbidden love, political upheaval, and malicious court gossip. This novel continues where The Accidental Empress left off in 1868 up through 1898, when Sisi was assassinated on a street in Geneva, Switzerland simply because she was in the wrong place at the wrong time. What had started out as a marriage with high hopes and love had become distant and cold. She never felt that Franz was there for her. Sisi's husband Franz Joseph loved his wife, but so much of their relationship was damaged by the interference of his mother and the demands of rigid court life.

Hungary was her favorite place, and there she enjoyed the peace of the countryside and the forbidden love she shared with Count Andrassy. For Sisi, she often traveled away from court-usually for weeks at a time. People refer to her as the Princess Diana of her day, and that may be so in that both women felt trapped by their lives, and searched for ways to escape. Sisi was known for her beauty and floor-length hair. She had grown enough backbone to refuse to send Valerie down the same path as her siblings. Her third child, Valerie (born many years later) stayed by Sisi's side. His mother, Archduchess Sophie ruled the court, and Sisi always felt like a failure, and was completely demoralized when her first two children, Rudy and Gisela were swiftly taken from her arms after birth and raised away from Sisi, with no input from her at all. Sisi's husband, Franz Joseph, was born and raised to be an Emperor. The Austro-Hungarian Empire of the mid 1800's was vast, and a powerhouse. With that being said, after a quick history lesson on Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary, I was ready to keep reading, and I was impressed at the research Allison Pataki put into this historical novel. I recommend you read The Accidental Empress before you tackle Sisi so that you may get the complete story of Sisi's incredible life and tragic death.


I quickly realized there is a book before Sisi that begins with Sisi's early life and marriage to Emperor Franz Joseph, and the difficulties she had adjusting to life as an Empress in the stifling Austrian court. It seemed to start right in the middle of Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary's life. I started reading this novel, and I must confess I was a bit confused.
