Haiti's only queen gets the royal treatment in this novel of race, revolution, and female resistance.
Like Netflix’s glittering take on the Bridgerton novels, this provocative story spotlights Black aristocrats navigating the class system and color lines during the Regency era. Riley, who also wrote about indomitable women and the Haitian Revolution in Sister Mother Warrior (2022), applies her talent for creating compelling, history-inspired characters to the story of Marie-Louise Christophe, crowned queen of Haiti in 1810 following the Haitian Revolution. For 10 years, she and her husband, King Henry I, rule the Northern Hemisphere’s only free Black nation until their kingdom is overthrown and Henry commits suicide. Marie-Louise and her two daughters take the family jewels and flee to England, where they hope to live in comfort as royal refugees. Against the backdrop of Haiti’s tumultuous history and the growing global disgust with slavery, Riley unfurls Marie-Louise's story in a languid and captivating style as the exiled queen reclaims her family’s vast fortune, tirelessly protects her daughters, and champions her husband's legacy. In flashback chapters set in Haiti, Riley contrasts Henry’s obsession with power and wealth with Marie-Louise's sensible focus on doing what's best for the Haitian people. In exile in England and on the European continent, Riley’s engaging characters pull us into the world of privileged royals, their stately homes, breathtaking wealth, and, deliciously, their romances and illicit affairs. Acutely aware of the challenges facing a Black queen, Riley deftly builds a portrait of a proud woman who commits her life to showing the world “that it was possible to be royal, Black, and have a happily-ever-after life.”
Fans of Regency romances and stories of strong Black women will find Haiti’s Queen Marie-Louise irresistible.