Dianaworld cover art

Dianaworld

An Obsession

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Dianaworld

By: Edward White
Narrated by: Josette Simon
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

A brilliant, kaleidoscopic new cultural history of Diana, her many lives and the world she created

‘This book is about layers of mythology and the people connected to them. It is less a biography of Diana, more the story of a cultural obsession told via an exploration of “Dianaworld”, the sprawling, ever-evolving precinct of her various lives—public and private, real and imagined.’

In February 1981 a 19-year-old nursery teacher’s assistant overnight became globally famous. In a frenzy of excitement, jumping every barrier of language and class, a new, overwhelming icon was conjured up.

This is a guide to Dianaworld – the extraordinary hall-of-mirrors through which one young woman, the world’s media, the royal family, and everybody else stalked one another. Fashion-plate, breeder of heirs, role model, fantasy object, saint and sinner, Diana gripped the minds of millions of people in ways which were unique, complex and distressing. After her death, chased by paparazzi through a Paris traffic tunnel, an estimated 2.5 billion people watched her funeral.

Edward White examines Princess Diana as the complex figure she was: a scion of a great aristocratic house, wife of the future king, mother of his heirs, an inspiration and delight to countless people for many years. And yet, of course: a human being inevitably and woefully underequipped either to deal with the horrors of the House of Windsor or control, or even lightly supervise, the Dianaworld she and others had created. This is a wonderful book, both admiring and incredulous, exuberant and melancholy.

© Edward White 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

20th Century Europe Great Britain Modern Politics & Activism Royalty Women

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Critic reviews

A kaleidoscopic portrait of Princess Diana (1961–1997), as viewed by the people whose lives she touched... White takes an evenhanded perspective on his subject... his panoramic approach attests to her lasting influence across the world. This achieves the difficult task of finding a novel take on the much-discussed former royal
I didn’t think it possible to produce an interesting book about Princess Diana at this juncture, but, by George, White has done it [...] there is an admirable intelligence at work here (Nicola Shulman)
A wide-ranging cultural history of the former Princess of Wales... Dianaworld teems with striking, odd anecdotes that will be irresistible to anyone with an eye for Diana-related ephemera (Katie Rosseinsky)
Edward White’s lively, deeply researched Dianaworld gives us something very different... The strength of White’s approach is his desire to take seriously the stories that drew people to Diana and continue to shape her afterlives. There is no single explanation for her enduring appeal – and in fact, any attempt to provide one will seem foolish after White’s book... This book is an ingenious solution to the problem of biography in an age of global celebrity (Tiffany Watt Smith)
The best thing I’ve ever read about Princess Diana and I’ve read all of it, including her own books... It’s really fascinating, I really loved it... brilliantly done...
Devotees of the ‘People’s Princess’ will revel in White’s explorations of the territory behind the curtain
Highly entertaining, witty and just judgemental enough... With an enjoyably light touch, White takes apart the affectation of Diana and other famous people (Moira Richard)
Excellently written and extremely diverting (The Standard)
This eclectic non-fiction account of the sociological phenomenon of Princess Diana reveals some fascinating oddities
Equitable and ecumenical… White ensures that readers will appreciate the phenomenal impact this often misunderstood yet perennially alluring woman has made on the culture (Carol Haggas)
All stars
Most relevant
I have very mixed feelings about this book. I like it because it’s different to other biographies about Diana. I disliked it because it went down several rabbit holes that were very odd. I liked it because at times it was funny and amusing, at others it was tediously boring. It kept me on my toes, but does it deserve another listen? Probably not. It’s a long listen that feels even longer at some points.

If you, like me, have grown up on traditional biographies in Diana, then you may find this book hard to get to grips with. It feels extremely intellectual as if I’m not smart enough to understand it, which makes it hard to enjoy. It’s such an abstract book about Diana it feels strange.

However, despite what I didnt like about this book, there are parts of it that truly get you to look at Diana from a different perspective. And I appreciated that. I’ve long known there is more to Diana than the heartbroken fairytale Princess image she often portrayed. And in that element this book is food for thought.

I’m not disappointed that I’ve listened to this book, even though at times it was hard to listen to. But is it something I’ll listen to again? I’m not sure.

A Very Different Diana Book

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Mythological Princess Diana vs actual Princess Diana.
Listened to at 1,2 speed it becomes very interesting and enjoyable.

Interesting perspective

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I don't normally review on here, but just wanted to say the decision to 'do the voices' when reading quotes from other people is distracting and annoying, and also a bit disrespectful

Interesting book, shame about the accents

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Some interesting insights into the place Diana has in our culture
As other reviewers have mentioned, the narration is a huge drawback and impacted on my enjoyment of this book. There’s no reason to put on regional accents, for goodness sake. And you’d think someone would have checked the pronunciation that Diana’s family use of ‘Althorp’!

Interesting insights, dreadful narration

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I was so excited to listen to this book. It’s an interesting a new perspective to one of the most known women in the UK and all the more interesting that there is an entire generation of adults are now living having being born after her passing

Unfortunately i could not enjoy the book as the narrator hijacked the role of reading it to display her acting abilities. Not only does she speak to the reader in a deeply condescending tone, like she is speaking to a child, she frequently puts on bad accents when quoting people. There is absolutely no need to do a poor impersonation of an American accent when quoting an American. Or an Australian. Or a Scot etc. The narrator has ruined this book. I hope others provide similar feedback so it can be narrated again by someone who understands that the role is not a platform to display their voice acting abilities, rather it is to read the text clearly. Honestly i would prefer AI to narrate this over the narrator.

An interesting book ruined by the reader

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