The Memoirs of Count Grammont — Volume 03 by Count Anthony Hamilton
It’s one thing to know the dates of the English Restoration. It’s something else entirely to hear it from a witty French courtier who was actually there, making secret bets and breaking hearts. “The Memoirs of Count Grammont — Volume 03” by Anthony Hamilton dishes the dirt on King Charles II’s court with an inside baseball tour of scandal, love, and clashing egos.
The Story
This volume picks up in the 1660s, right when London was shaking off Puritan gloom for champagne-fueled drama. Our guide, the roguish Count Grammont—a French exile who fled a duel back home—becomes king of the party scene. He’s not recounting political treaties or battle plans; it’s personal. You get the scheming behind the Queen’s maids of honor, manipulative dukes, clever widows, and romantic auctions. Key moments include a plot to trick a proud lord into marrying the wrong woman, and a sting operation to free innocent girls from a sultan’s harem (yes, really). But at its core is Grammont himself, coasting on charm and mixing up court power plays for love.
Why You Should Read It
Because history is full of heroic boring chronicles millions pages with no personality. Twenty pages into this book, you’ll feel like these pasty aristocrats are texting you the latest scandal. Hamilton’s voice sneaks in quick sarcasm—almost sarcastically gossipy. I fell in love with the mix of sleaze and heart, where desire can land you riches or total ruin. Plus, stories about defiant women from long ago always pull me in. Memoirs volume III treats these women as smart, tricky masterminds stuck in a man’s world. These pages don’t smell like dust, they smell like betrayal and oysters.
Final Verdict
This jolly sneaky memoir is for anyone who gets bored reading dym things out of dry nonfiction. Lovers of costume dramas, Jane Austen lovers who want unhingic undertones, and folx who enjoy gossip that secret true it will flash your mind with two hundred sixty years old crowd that act basically exactly like highschoolers. Not for the socially awkward committed highminded
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