Some
magazines which you may have missed on their initial
appearance on newsstands are still available through the net. Back
issues of Hello! magazine and
other celebrity magazines clear back to the first issue can be obtained
from Magazines Galore
at prices ranging from five to seven pounds or eight to eleven dollars.
UK collectibles has some magazines and a section of Royalty collectibles
which includes back issues of copies of Majesty and Royalty magazines,
jigsaw puzzles, issues from the series, Diana, the Untold Story,
and A Century of Royals, commemorative
booklets from the 1981 and
1986 weddings, and numerous other items.
You can also get back issues
directly from Hello!.
Notable issues to consider are 7 September 1997 (the memorial issue),
31 October 2000 (the Kensington Palace exhibit of the Catharine Walker
dresses that was there during 2000-2001, 26 June 2001 (her 40th
birthday), and 31 July 2001 (the 20th anniversary of the Royal
Wedding). Their site lists an email address to contact for
further information about availability, prices, shipping and means of
payment at hello@hellomagazine.com or you can send your request to:
Back Issues Department
Hello! Magazine
Wellington House
69-71 Upper Ground
London SE1 9PQ
United Kingdom
Pitkin
Guides still stocks their
Princess Diana guidebook by Brian Hoey, which was reprinted in 2001 and
is stocked again at the online bookstores. To retrieve it, type: Diana
Princess of Wales in the search box. The price is 3.99 pounds ($6.37)
plus shipping. The site also has Charles
and Camilla: a Royal Occasion, as well as their guidebooks,
posters, calendars, cd-roms, screeenslavers, and slides of places in
Britain.
An interesting novel
which came out in August 1999 is Kay Kellam's A Life to Di
For, in which a woman reporter travels back 400 years in time to
get one of the scoops of all time--what really happened in the tunnel.
An excerpt is available on its listing at Amazon. I have also reviewed it
on the Book and Video Reviews, J-S
page of this site.
- An unusual and humorous
fictional piece inspired by Charles and Diana about "Prince Arthur"
and "Princess Susan" is the scenario, All the King's Men,
which was written by J. Neil Schulman in 1983 for a television movie
which was never made. In it she tires of royal life and flees to
America in search of a good divorce lawyer, but she returns to "Arthur"
on her own terms. It is titled Profile in Silver and Other
Screenwritings, and you can purchase it from Amazon for $27.50, with used copies
available as cheaply as $20.63.
- Susan Maxwell Skinner,
who was a reporter covering Princess Diana in the early 1980s, wrote
two books on her in 1982 and 1999, the latter titled, Diana, an
English Rose. I emphasize this because she published another book
in October, 2001 titled Diana: Memory of a Rose, which is less
than half the length of the 1999 book and is paperback, but it is a
limited edition and will be personally inscribed to you. She also is on
the lecture circuit with a multi-media presentation about Diana, and
you can buy the the latest book, a poster of Diana titled, "Diana: a Legacy of Beauty, Love and
Service", or a set of postcards with the same image, see
pictures from her memorabilia collection, which she sometimes brings on
public display in conjunction with her speaking engagements, or inquire
about her availability as a speaker at her site.
- A lovely little book for
vicarious sightseeing is A Walk for Diana: The Diana,
Princess of Wales Memorial Walk by Tom Corby and Lucy Trench. It
was published by The Royal Parks and it consists of lavishly
illustrated and excellent essays about Princess Diana, Spencer House,
Buckingham Palace, Clarence House, St. James Palace, Kensington Palace.
Next there is an overview map of the entire Memorial Walk, followed by
more detailed maps preceding each chapter about Hyde Park, Kensington
Gardens, Green Park, and St. James Park, with references to the
statues, flora, and fauna you will find along the route. It's all the
better if you think you will never get to London, for at least it will
give you the sensation that you have been there too. One word of
warning: unless you already walk several miles each day, you should not
consider doing this walk in one day, since the book says it is seven
miles long. I can attest from having spent a day in 1989 walking
extensively through all four parks that they are a lot of
territory to cover. You can get it from The
Royal Parks site for 9.95 pounds plus shipping, and it was also
available at the gift shop at Kensington Palace when I visited there in
2002.
- One of the first
scholarly books about Princess Diana comes from Australia--Planet
Diana: Cultural Studies and Global Mourning, which is a
collection of essays which were given at an academic conference two
months after her death. The book is frequently cited in any reputable
scholarly journal articles published about Diana. The current price is
$22 Australian dollars. You can use the e-mail address on the
publication page to order it from the research center that created it,
and they do take credit cards. One of its essays, "Vanishing Point"can
be read online.
Playwright Laurel Haines
has written a "jokey,
monologue-driven" play, The Dianalogues, which was
performed in fall 2002 in Arizona, and the script is included in Women
Playwrights: The Best Plays of 2003, edited by D. L. Lepidus, which
was published by Smith and Kraus in April 2004. This book is still
available from Barnes and Noble for
$19.95.
English Rose Press
is the home page of Christine Toomey, a psychic who has channeled
messages from Diana and published In Her Own Words: The After Death
Journal of Princess Diana. You can read the messages, read excerpts
from and buy the book, listen to and purchase a CD of music composed to
go with the book, and book spiritual readings with Ms. Toomey.
Copies of the Christie's
auction catalog are cheapest on ebay, where copies of the paperback
catalog can be owned for $200-$300, though the hardcover copies are
will go for at least twice as much because there were only 5,000 of
them printed.
But that's still a bargain compared to what you would pay from a rare
book dealer for either item: a comparison of
twenty-eight copies
available at AddAll finds that
the softcover runs from $225.00-$658.70, while the two hardcover
editions
are priced at $1,469.16 and $1,503.58.
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