'...charming...Chantal Thomas recreates the ravishing spectacle of Versailles, as seen through the eyes of naive Agathe-Sidonie Laborde, companion and lectrice to the enigmatic Marie-Antoinette...full of wonderful descriptions.' -- Janina Pogorzelski LADY MAGAZINE (23.12.03) 'A well written slice of history...Cast in evocative, observant prose, it generates in the reader a real sense of being a fly on the wall, eavesdropping on the affairs of the great and the not so good.' -- Helen Falconer GUARDIAN (10.1.04) 'All the intimate details of the last days are recounted with remarkable observation, and the reader feels that he or she is actually part of what is happening...the novel is obviously based on meticulous research. This is history in its most readable form.' -- Tim Manderson PUBLISHING NEWS (10.10.03) 'Chantal Thomas makes a smooth transition from historian to fiction writer, using her knowledge of the era to enhance her already evocative turn of phrase. Versaille in all its opulence and debauchery is deftly brought to life and the poetry of these lyrical passages in not lost in their translation from the original French...an impressive debut.' -- Lucy Evans INK (1.1.04) 'a fascinating picture of life at Versailles.' -- David Coward TLS (16.1.04) 'Marie-Antoinette s the subject of hundreds of biographies and movels, but perhaps none of them brings the reader quite so close to her as Farewell, My Queen...The author's imaginative fluency and her close acquantance with every detail are astonishing; her writing is delicate, aerial, precise.' -- Hilary Mantel NEW STATESMAN (19.1.04) 'Thomas...has researched her subject deeply. She conveys impeccably the spirit of the time...the book offers fascinating insights into three days that changed forever the social structure of France.' -- Clare Colvin INDEPENDENT (27.1.04) 'It's a racy, pacy story with a cast of rogues and villains and a wardrobe to make you swoon.' MAIL ON SUNDAY (25.1.04) 'This is a charming and entertaining read about the end of an era.' GOOD BOOK GUIDE 'Thomas knows her Versailles; she gives a vivid picture of the glorious ship that was the ancien regime, of the ebb and flow of hope and fear as it began to founder, and of that elusive moment when power vanishes, never to return.' -- Joanna Hines LITERARY REVIEW (May 2004)