| Biography
|
 |
obert
Lacey is a British historian noted for his
original research,
which gets him close to - and often living alongside
- his subjects. He
is the author of numerous international bestsellers.
After writing his first works of historical biography,
Robert, Earl of
Essex and Sir Walter Ralegh, Robert wrote Majesty,
his pioneering
biography of Queen Elizabeth II. Published in
1977, Majesty remains
acknowledged as the definitive study of British
monarchy - a subject on
which the author continues to write and lecture
around the world,
appearing regularly on ABC's Good Morning America
and on CNN's Larry King
Live.
The Kingdom, a study of Saudi Arabia published
in 1981, is similarly
acknowledged as required reading for businessmen,
diplomats and students
all over the world. To research The Kingdom,
Robert and his wife Sandi
took their family to live for eighteen months
beside the Red Sea in
Jeddah. Going out into the desert, this was when
Robert earned his title
as the "method actor" of contemporary
biographers.
In March 1984 Robert Lacey took his family to
live in Detroit, Michigan,
to write Ford: the Men and the Machine, a best
seller on both sides of
the Atlantic which formed the basis for the TV
mini-series of the same
title, starring Cliff Robertson.
Robert's other books include biographies of the
gangster Meyer Lansky,
Princess Grace of Monaco and a study of Sotheby's
auction house. He co-
authored The Year 1000 - An Englishman's World,
a description of life at
the turn of the last millennium. In 2002, the
Golden Jubilee Year of
Queen Elizabeth II, he published Royal (Monarch
in America), hailed by
Andrew Roberts in London's Sunday Telegraph as "compulsively
readable",
and by Martin Amis in The New Yorker as "definitive".
With the publication of his Great Tales Robert
Lacey returns to his first
love - history.
For full details of all Robert's books, go
to the back catalogue and
click on the jackets displayed.
< back to top
|
 |

To download a Hi-Res
version of this photo click
here.
|