She also visited the Theatre Royal and the Holburne Museum during her trip
Queen Camilla travelled to Bath this week where she visited the city’s Holburne Museum, the historic Theatre Royal and an independent publisher that reprints neglected fiction and non-fiction mostly by women. During her trip to Persephone bookshop on Tuesday (February 17) the Queen, 78, met founder Nicola Beauman and managing director Francesca Beauman.
During the meeting, the trio discussed the importance of creating a 20th-century literary canon based around domestic feminist narratives. They also chatted about the need to rescue lost literary voices and how readers are more used to male literary perspectives on the First and Second World War than female ones.
The Queen also described the new Buckingham Palace library where she is planning to include her Persephone books.
Francesca Beauman said: “We were thrilled to welcome Her Majesty the Queen to Persephone Books. She came to Bath to visit the Holburne Museum, the Theatre Royal and us.
“We showed her round the bookshop, then she sat down at the ‘wrapping table’ and had a cup of tea (‘milk and one’). A tiny etiquette drama as we weren’t sure whether to pour the milk for her, or not! We had a delightful chat about, not to be immodest, why our books are so wonderful.”
She added: “There was a large and affectionate crowd waiting outside as she left, with three of our books, if she ever has time to read them: Crooked Cross by Sally Carson, They Were Sisters by Dorothy Whipple and Mariana by Monica Dickens.”
During her trip to Bath, the Queen also paid a visit to the Theatre Royal where she watched a preview of a community production of David Copperfield.
She also visited the recently completed Schroder Gallery at the Holburne Museum and toured new exhibitions, including A Life in Print by fashion designer Dame Zandra Rhodes and viewed photographs by Sir Don McCullin.
It was Queen Camilla’s second trip to the South West this month after she visited the HQ of Avon and Somerset Police in Portishead near Bristol.














