cover image Traitor King: The Scandalous Exile of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor

Traitor King: The Scandalous Exile of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor

Andrew Lownie. Pegasus, $32 (416p) ISBN 978-1-63936-141-0

This gossipy dual portrait of Edward VIII and his American wife, Wallis Simpson, opens with Edward’s abdication in 1936 in order to marry Simpson, who was recently divorced from her second husband. Biographer and literary agent Lownie (The Mountbattens) explains that as WWII loomed, the British government saw the Duke of Windsor as a “security risk” due to his pro-German sympathies, and notes that the royal family was not allowed to attend the couple’s June 1937 wedding. While Edward and Wallis hobnobbed with Nazi officials, rumors swirled that Edward was bisexual and that Wallis was the only woman who could “satisfactorily gratify” his sexual desires. Universally described as “ambitious,” the Duchess was extravagant and demanding of her staff, while the Duke was perceived as aimless. After appealing to Prime Minister Winston Churchill for an assignment, he was appointed Governor of the Bahamas, where he befriended Nazi sympathizers and presided over the flawed police investigation into the murder of mining magnate Sir Harry Oakes. Lownie gathers convincing evidence of Edward’s collaboration with Germany and amasses a wealth of new material, including intimate details about the Duchess’s affair with American socialite James Donahue. Royal watchers will be riveted. (May)