Showing posts with label Diana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diana. Show all posts

Diana had an affair with ex-French President?


Eighty-three-year-old former French president Valery Giscard d'Estaing has brightened his long retirement by writing a steamy romantic novel about a French leader's affair with a British princess.

The Princess and the President recounts the secret and passionate love of two characters clearly modelled closely on both Giscard himself and the late Diana, Princess of Wales, according to Monday's edition of the daily Le Figaro.

Recast as President Jacques-Henri Lambertye and Princess Patricia of Cardiff, the pair meet at the closing dinner of a G7 summit after the young British royal has been left miserable by her princely husband's adultery.

"I kissed her hand and she gave me a questioning look, her slate grey eyes widening as she tilted her head gently forward," the presidential first-person narrator recounts, according to an excerpt published in Le Figaro.

The newspaper said Giscard's book rises above the level of a well-written romantic novel because of the wealth of detail he is able to supply about the French and British characters and the palaces in which they meet.

As befits a member of the prestigious Academie Francaise, the president also alludes to the literary classics, such as Alexandre Dumas' tales of the love between French princess Anne of Austria and the Duke of Buckingham.

But the book will most likely cause a stir as the latest to cash in on the posthumous Diana publishing industry, particularly as it includes a playful hint that there might be an element of truth in the story.

According to Le Figaro, the book opens with the phrase "Promise kept" and ends with: "'You asked me for permission for you to write your story,' she told me. 'I give you it, but you must make me a promise ...'."

While marketed as a novel, there is little doubt that the characters are closely modelled on real life figures from recent history.

Princess Patricia shares Diana's passion for charity work with children with AIDS and campaigns as she did against anti-personnel mines.

"A fortnight before my marriage, my future husband told me that he had a mistress and was determined to continue his relationship with her," Patricia tells her French lover, according to the leaked extract.

President Lambertye also appears to be a close fit with Giscard, except for one key detail, one that suggests that the author is keen to reimagine history in a more flattering light.

While the fictional Lambertye wins a second term with a comfortable 56 percent, the real Giscard was turfed out of office in 1981 after being accused of corruptly receiving diamonds from Emperor Bokassa of Central Africa.

Giscard lost the vote in May 1981, costing him the chance of representing France two months later when Diana Spencer married Prince Charles, and thus the pair were never simultaneously the "Princess and the President".

Nevertheless, some commentators said that Giscard had left himself open to ridicule by penning a book even hinting at an affair -- he was 55 years old in 1981, Diana was 19. Some warned he risked tainting his legacy.

"How does he want posterity to remember him?" demanded the magazine Marianne on its website. "As the guy who legalised abortion? Who gave 18-year-olds the vote? Who brought female ministers into government?

"By talking about Diana, Giscard is remaking himself the great inventor of the celebrity presidency. A low-brow gossip president who needs the skills of a psychoanalyst to understand history," it stormed.

Diana died in a road accident with her boyfried Dodi Fayed in Paris in August 1997. Her life and loves were a target of massive media attention both before and after her death, and books about her continue to sell extremely well.

The Princess and the President will be released in Paris in French on October 1 by publishers Fallois-Xo.

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French President Pens princess Romance: Is it true?


Former President Valery Giscard d'Estaing has written a novel about a secret love affair between a French head of state and an unhappy British princess, who bears a striking resemblance to Lady Diana.

"The Princess and the President" is due to be published next month and is already the focus of fierce speculation over whether it is based on fact or fantasy.

Giscard, who was president of France from 1974-1981, names his fictional French leader as Jacques-Henri Lambertye, while the heroine is Princess Patricia of Cardiff, "a town in Wales".

The pair meet at an official dinner at Buckingham Palace and the beautiful princess soon reveals her sad plight, according to excerpts published in Le Figaro newspaper on Monday.

"A dozen days before my wedding, my future husband came and told me that he had a mistress and that he had to decided to carry on seeing her after our marriage," says Princess Pat, evoking memories of rows between Prince Charles and Diana.

The book contains a lot of wishful thinking on the author's part, including the fact that President Lambertye wins a second mandate whereas Giscard was voted out of office just weeks before Diana married the Prince of Wales.

But he has fuelled gossip that there might be some truth in the tale by writing a cryptic inscription at the start of the book: "Promise kept". At the end of the book, he writes: "You asked my permission for you to write your story," she told me. "I give you it, but you must make me a promise ..."

Le Figaro said the book was bound to cause waves.

"Fiction or reality? Only the former president holds the key to this troubling story," it said.
Giscard was only 55 when he lost power and photographs show that the dome-headed statesman met Diana publicly in the years following his election defeat. One Reuters picture shows the former Princess of Wales smiling delightedly at Giscard.

Diana died in a car crash in central Paris in 1997 along with her boyfriend, Dodi al Fayed. Media reports said Giscard and his wife were the first people to send flowers to the hospital where her body was taken. Advertisement