Neither of the main players in this account of the on/off relationship between Greta Garbo & Cecil Beaton come across as very nice people. Garbo, well-known as reclusive, seems also quite selfish & rude & dismissive of her fans, whilst Beaton seems like a bit of a flibbertigibbet. They meet, then don't meet for fifteen years, meet again & have a brief affair, which Beaton thinks will lead to marriage. When it doesn't, Beaton commits the ultimate betrayal in Garbo's eyes - he talks to the press.
There's an LGBTQ+ slant to the book as both Garbo & Beaton had affairs with both men & women, & both liked to wear clothes typically worn by the opposite sex at the time. Ultimately their personalities were too different to have ever made a go of things as a couple. Overall it was quite interesting as I didn't know a lot about either of them, but really, not much happened & it was very slow at times.
TW: racist, anti-Semitic, homophobic, & misogynist phrases in the period quotations.