If you’ve been into the latest Royal Baby buzz you’ve got to check out the newest easy-read eBook by Angela Levin called Diana’s Baby ($6.99 – EMBooks.com)
Even though I’m a US citizen, the birth of the royal baby excited me as did Princess Diana. This eBook talks about how William grew up in a broken family and how he is potentially changing that pattern for his newborn baby boy, Prince George of Cambridge.
This book also covers how the Prince bravely faced his emotional demons and how he embraces the Middleton family values.
About Diana’s Baby
World’s First Royal Baby Book
Immediately and Extensively Updated To Include All Details of the Safe Arrival of the New Baby Prince
New preface by Melanie Phillips
The world’s very first royal baby book!
37 high-res, full color photographs
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Immediately and extensively updated to include all details of the events leading up the arrival of William and Kate’s new baby prince, the book covers the rumors, the media frenzy, the timeline to the baby’s safe arrival on the hottest day of the year in Great Britain. Angela Levin’s book also includes an assessment of the significance of the baby for the future of the Monarchy in Britain, what the likely influence of the very ordinary Middletons is likely to be and just how HRH Prince William – Diana’s first and beloved baby, managed to overcome the destructive chain of his own dysfunctional beginnings.
“The announcement that billions of people round the world had been waiting for with growing anxiety, finally came at 20.30pm on July 22 2013. The news was out that Kate Middleton, a young woman from an ordinary family had given birth to a healthy baby boy, prince and future king.
It was a monumental moment and one that instantly reverberated round the world. The baby, to be known as His Royal Highness Prince xxxx of Cambridge, had arrived at the Lindo Wing of St Mary’s Hospital, west London at 16.24 after a fourteen hour labour endured on the hottest day of the year. His weight was a solid 8lbs 6 ozs, the heaviest future monarch in a hundred years and considerably more than his father Prince William, who by contrast, weighed a mere 7 pounds one and one half.
Prince William immediately called the Queen, his father Prince Charles, his brother Harry and Kate’s parents Carole and Michael Middleton. But it took another four hours before he gave the go ahead for the declaration to be made public.
The announcement via email from Kensington Palace noted he was present at the birth and was ‘delighted’. And no wonder. The birth of an heir to the throne is a rare and special event full of historical significance as well as personal joy. But it is also the most intimate time in a couple’s life. Creating a new life signifies a new beginning. Neither Kate nor William will ever be quite the same again.
There was profound sadness too that his mother Diana, Princess of Wales, wasn’t there to share his happiness and would never meet or enjoy her grandson. His new status as a father is also the surest way to exorcise much from his early troubled years. William has grown up knowing he had to keep his feelings under wraps. He barely trusted anyone and only reluctantly learnt to live in the spotlight. Kate’s devotion, confidence and love has helped him have confidence in his feelings. His son is the perfect catalyst to allow him to find even greater personal happiness.”
Their baby will mark the final stage in a moving tale of redemption that will give hope not just to future generations of his own family but also to the British monarchy. It is the inspirational tale of an extraordinary prince who has sought salvation in the ordinary.
And behind this happy story, however, lies an even more hopeful and inspiring message. The fragmentation of the family, with huge rates of divorce and rising number of children who have never known a committed father at all is deeply troubling. The damage this is doing to both individuals and society is incalculable. Even more alarming, however, is that those brought up in fractured family units so often replicate this unhappy pattern as they have no healthy family model upon which to draw.
If anyone seemed at one time to be caught in this trap, it was surely Prince William; second in line to the British throne, he was raised with every advantage, except what every child needs most, a secure, stable, loving family background. As Angela Levin explains, William’s parents, Diana, Princess of Wales and Prince Charles, had a disastrous marriage that formed a pattern of behavior he was destined to repeat.