A rich biography that places a pellucid lens on one of the great untold stories of the Regency age. Despite Catherine Long-Tylney’s real significance in British history, she’s largely forgotten today - a travesty this book powerfully corrects.
In her own time, Catherine was well known and immensely popular; she moved among the likes of the royals and Wellington, dominated the press as a sort of ‘Shy Di’ who blossomed into a fashion icon and later long-suffering wife, and her story helped prickle national consciousness on issues such as divorce, custody, women’s rights, domestic cruelty, and libel.
It’s a bit frustrating, then, that Catherine is somewhat decentralised in her own story, with the focus of this particular biography largely falling on her husband, William Wellesley Pole. Granted, his long, scandalous life is the stuff of novels - and so perhaps the shift is inevitable - but Catherine is no less interesting for her honorable lifestyle. I would have liked to have seen more of the story revolve on Catherine and her experiences than William’s constant philandering and general debauchery.
Nonetheless, this author’s ability to paint the story of their lives with sweeping, cinematic descriptions, combined with her eagle-eyed investigation of the original source material, makes this an “unputdownable” book. I heartily enjoyed every page and appreciated the author’s ability to connect Catherine and William’s experiences to other figures, movements, and timely questions of the period. But it is, in truth, Catherine’s sharp intelligence, courage, generous heart and savvy handling of William’s cruelties - toward herself, her family, and her children - that make this an utterly gripping read.
Definitely give ‘The Angel and the Cad’ a shot - and please, Amazon, add it to Kindle - you won’t regret it! (Though I have to admit that I have GENUINELY never disliked a historical husband more - William Wellesley Pole makes Henry VIII look like the biblical Joseph - which made finishing this book somewhat of a challenge. His behavior was genuinely enraging and Catherine should’ve wiped the floor with him).