The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett
In England, a traveling library stops near the palace and gets an unexpected visitor: none other than the Queen herself. (The present Queen of England, we are to assume.) Out of courtesy, the Queen decides to borrow a book by Ivy Compton-Burnett. And thence begins the Queen's literary adventure, much to her delectation and to her Cabinet's horror. For, believe it or not, reading as a hobby is quite a hindrance to the Queen's performance of her duties. So goes the story of Alan Bennett's The Uncommon Reader . One of the other uncommon things about this book is how I always find it misplaced in one of the local bookshops. Perhaps because the back cover blurb says it's about the Queen as a reader? Because it is always placed in the Nonfiction shelf, when it is most definitely NOT a nonfiction book at all. Unless, that is, at some point in her life, the Queen was...wait. That would be a spoiler. Anyway, it's a short and lovely book. I say that because I don...