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William and Kate: News from the palace

William and Kate: News from the palace

William is determined his bride won’t struggle the way his mother Diana did when she married into ‘the Firm’.

When Kate Middleton stepped through the door of Clarence House on Tuesday, November 16, as a newly engaged royal fiancee, she wasn’t exactly entering a whole new world. Prince William had made certain her preparation to become a princess started more than a year ago.

Mindful of the way an unprepared Princess Diana was thrown into court life, carrying out official duties even before her wedding, William wants Kate to have a much easier transition into her royal role than his mother did.

He has decided she will not be involved in any public engagements ithout him for a considerable time, and that she will spend most of her days at their secluded farmhouse in Anglesey, Wales, where she can quietly adjust to her new position.

Perhaps more than anyone else, William understands the pressures on a new princess and is anxious to shield Kate as much as possible from the world’s scrutiny while she learns the ropes.

He also long ago gave her a clear idea of what her future would be like, “in case she wanted to back out”, as he put it. Weekends at Prince Charles’s private residences, Highgrove in Gloucestershire and Birkhall at Balmoral, as well as attending the odd party at Windsor Castle, has given her a lot of insight into the way the House of Windsor works.

Read the full five page exclusive report in this week’s Woman’s Day!

Related video: Prince William congratulates Ian Thorpe on his charity work.

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James Blunt gears up for Aussie tour

James Blunt gears up for Aussie tour

Looking out over the gorgeous harbour on a perfect Sydney day, UK singer James Blunt can’t help but confess his love for Australia.

“I love it here. I think it’s the most amazing place,” he says. “You can tell anyone who lives here is a lucky person.”

The singer, who calls the sun-kissed island of Ibiza home, stopped off in Australia recently on a whirlwind promotional tour for his new album Some Kind of Trouble.

The 36-year-old, who says he was never trying to be a famous musician, but “was just trying to make albums that he loved” will be back on Aussie shores in May 2011 as part of his third world tour.

Known for his hits ‘Beautiful’ and ‘Goodbye My Lover’, Blunt says his new album was put together differently to the first two chart-topping albums.

“Previously I have written the album first and then gone in and recorded it, which is easy to do if you just have an acoustic guitar and you go in and record it. Both of my first albums have been more melancholic,” he says.

This album however, saw Blunt work more spontaneously with the producer to come up with most of the songs.

“We didn’t realise we were making an album. At the time I just met him, it was supposed to be for a beer, he was playing his piano and I walked in and picked up an electric guitar and wrote a song called ‘Dangerous’,” Blunt says.

“It was really upbeat and energetic. I loved it and I said, ‘You know what, if I can I am going to come back tomorrow and record this demo.’ And I did and it sounded great and I said, ‘What if I come in a third day and record another?’ And I did and days turned into weeks which turned into months and we made more demos and we produced those tracks and got the finished product.”

A final product which Blunt is really proud of.

“I love it, that’s why I am putting it out. I am really excited about it and I had a lot of fun making it and now is that really exciting time where you see whether other people like it too,” he says.

Fortunately for Blunt it seems he will have similar success with his third album as he did with his first two. Stay the Night has jumped up the ARIA singles chart from spot 42 to 14 in a week, while his album Some Kind of Trouble is at the number eight spot on the ARIA album chart.

So why does he like this album so much?

“I have different highlights. I love ‘Turn Me On’, which is the final track on the album. The record label didn’t want it on the album. They battled that but it’s my album,” he says.

“I think they thought it wasn’t in the same theme as the music I have done before, but I wrote it and recorded it in seven hours and its really spontaneous and gritty and it sounds great.”

Tour details:

James Blunt’s May 2011 tour will visit the following national venues.

Brisbane Convention Centre, Saturday, May 14. For tickets, visit www.ticketek.com.au or call 132 849.

State Theatre Sydney, Monday, May 16. For tickets, visit www.ticketmaster.com.au or call 136 100.

Royal Theatre Canberra, Wednesday, May 18. For tickets, visit www.ticketek.com.au or call 132 849.

Thebarton Theatre Adelaide, Friday, May 20. For tickets, visit www.venuetix.com.au or call (08) 8225 8888.

Plenary Hall, Melbourne, Saturday, May 21. For tickets, visit www.ticketek.com.au or call 132 849.

Riverside Theatre, Perth, Monday, May 23. For tickets, visit www.ticketek.com.au or call 132 849.

Presale tickets are available for Frontier Members through www.frontiertouring.com on Tuesday, November, 30 from 3pm AEDT until Wednesday, December 1 at 3pm AEDT (or until pre-sale allocation is exhausted).

General public on sale from 9am local time, Friday, December 3, through the following outlets. All shows are all ages.

Watch: James Blunt’s new single Stay the Night

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Happy wife, happy life

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Have you ever asked yourself, “What makes me happy?” Your answer might be your good health, seeing your family healthy or liking what you see in the mirror. But these answers differ greatly from those identified by Canadian and US researchers who claim that your happiness, or lack thereof, might rest in your spouses’ hands.

The University of British Columbia, University of Washington and Pennsylvania State University study of more than 6000 people used data collected over more than 50 years. The researcher found that, particularly in long-term married couples, the happiness of both parties ebbed and flowed almost in unison, MSNBC reported.

“What we saw over a long period of time,” University of British Columbia lead researcher Professor Christiane Hoppmann said, “is that if one spouse changed in terms of increasing happiness, the other spouse’s happiness would go up. And if there was a dip in happiness, this dip would also affect the respective spouse.”

The researchers filtered data from the Seattle Longitudinal Study to examine specific results from married couples and then compared how happy they were.

While this research seemed to show that happiness in married couples is linked to the spouse, researchers are now wondering if this is a good or a bad thing.

“We can’t tell if one spouse lifts up the other when there’s trouble or whether one spouse drags the other down. It could be both,” Professor Hoppmann said.

Your say: What do you think of this study? Do you find your own happiness is dependent on your spouse’s? Do you find yourself dragging down or lifting up your spouse? Contact us at [email protected]

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*The Distant Hours*

In 30 words or less, tell us what is great about a book you are reading at the moment. The best critique will be printed in the February issue of The Weekly and the writer will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95.

THE DISTANT HOURS By Kate Morton, Allen & Unwin, $39.99.

“IT STARTED WITH a letter. A letter that had been lost a long time, waiting out half a century … in a forgotten postal bag in the dim attic of a nondescript house in Bermondsey. I think about it sometimes, that mailbag; of the hundreds of love letters, grocery bills, birthday cards, notes from children to their parents, that lay together, swelling and sighing as their thwarted messages whispered in the dark.”

So begins The Distant Hours, the latest novel by Kate Morton, following the runaway success of The Shifting Fog and The Forgotten Garden. Kate will not disappoint her legion of fans. In her signature style, this novel moves seamlessly from the 1990s to the grim wartime years of the 1940s, as our heroine unravels a decades-old mystery that has engulfed lives and left people changed forever. What is intriguing is how a woman who grew up at Tamborine Mountain, Queensland, attending a tiny country school, can create such vivid creations about events half a world away. Her secret is simple: old-fashioned groundwork and imagination.

“There was a lot of research to do, the sort done with books at my desk in my little office … plus a climb up Sissinghurst Tower [in Kent, England], guided tours of Blitz-torn London and an abandoned Underground station … I shiver just thinking about it!”

Also telling is her own admission that she spent much of her childhood inventing and playing games of make-believe with her sisters, and her adoration of author Enid Blyton.

Kate effortlessly paints in the minute detail of a nation at war: London’s children facing tearful farewells from their parents and a rushed evacuation to the countryside, clutching gas masks and borrowed suitcases.

There, a 13-year-old girl is chosen to live at Milderhurst Castle, where a new world opens up for the teenager as she discovers the joys of books and fantasy and writing, but she is also dragged into the adult world of love affairs gone awry and dangerous secrets.

Fifty years later, that girl’s daughter, Edie, is drawn to the castle and begins to unravel her mother’s past.

In 30 words or less, tell us what is great about a book you are reading at the moment. The best critique will be printed in the February issue of The Weekly and the writer will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95.

Please ensure you leave an email address you can be contacted on in order to be eligible for the prize.

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*Italian Food Safari*

ITALIAN FOOD SAFARI BY MAEVE O’MEARA WITH GUY GROSSI, HARDIE GRANT, $55.

The long-awaited next feast in SBS’s beautiful Food Safari series is a celebration of the Italian Australians who have kept their food traditions intact over generations. Travel again with Maeve O’Meara and legendary chef Guy Grossi as they spend time with Australia’s top Italian chefs and producers.

Covering the four seasons, Italian Food Safari introduces you to the cosy home kitchens where masterpieces are whipped up, the elegant restaurants filled with delicious aromas, plus the specialist providores and delis, bakeries, cheesemakers and pasticcerias. Offering simple foolproof recipes anyone could cook at home, this tome celebrates the extraordinary wealth of Italian culture – families building their wood-fired ovens, growing much of their produce and keeping food at the centre of family life, a tradition we all treasure.

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*On Radji Beach*

ON RADJI BEACH BY IAN W. SHAW, MACMILLAN AUSTRALIA, $34.99.

Social historian Ian Shaw plunges into the jungle of one of Australia’s most heroic acts of women’s wartime service. When two units of city and country nurses boarded the Queen Mary in 1941 to tend soldiers serving in Malaya, duties included treating insect bites and attending parties.

By Christmas Eve, Japanese had taken the island and the nurses tossed coins and “lost” if their fate was to board a ship for safer waters, leaving wounded soldiers behind. Twenty-two of the nurses were shipwrecked at Radji Beach, where Sister Vivian Bullwinkel was the only one to survive. She was reunited with her fellow nurses at Banka Island internment camp and moved to a camp in Sumatra, in March 1942, where many died. When rescued in 1945, the remaining 24 nurses weighed around 30kg each. Back in Australia, army psychologists thought it best to pretend the POW experience never happened and survivors suffered for the rest of their lives

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*Theodora: Actress. Empress. Whore.*

THEODORA: ACTRESS. EMPRESS. WHORE BY STELLA DUFFY, VIRAGO, $29.99.

When her father dies, Theodora survives by performing for men on the stage of Constantinople’s Hippodrome and in bed. Yet she will rise from the backstage brothels of the Byzantine Empire to become one of the most powerful women in the world.

Stella Duffy digs up the bones of this true story and gives them flesh. Ancient Constantinople comes to life, from the streets to the grounds and power plays of the palace. Theodora grows into a wild adolescent, a Christian convert, a wife and ruler. In the wrong hands, her story could become overblown, but Duffy keeps her life grounded in the context of the political and religious turmoil of the time and tells the story with intelligence.

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*Hand Me Down World*

HAND ME DOWN WORLD BY LLOYD JONES, TEXT PUBLISHING, $32.95.

This is the story of a woman who is on an extraordinarily difficult, lonely journey. At first, her tale is told by the people she meets.

There’s the randy truck driver, the kind group of hunters who smuggle her across the border and the woman whose name she steals. It isn’t until the end that we hear her voice and her own version of the truth, including the events that lead to a sudden death. If you disregarded the beauty of the writing and shook up all the pieces of the narrative until they fell in the usual places, Hand Me Down World could be a murder mystery. Yet its beauty and complexity make it a masterpiece, a novel written by an artist with a devious mind. It is an original; a story gracefully told from the inside out and back to front, one that will challenge and surprise.

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*Shall We Dance?*

SHALL WE DANCE? BY MAGGIE ALDERSON, MICHAEL JOSEPH, $32.95.

Vintage fashion queen Loulou Landers has one very distressing concern, her daughter Theo. She’s 21 going on 14, selfish and arrogant.

Luckily, Loulou has her ageing rock star mate, Ritchie Meredith, to lean on and her gay best friend, Keith, is throwing her a 50th birthday party. The universe seems to want to contribute by throwing 20-something Marc Thorsson her way. He’s smart, charming and keen on Loulou. Will she risk her daughter’s displeasure and expose herself to society’s sniggers? Meanwhile, Theo has her own admirer, an older man with eyes like a shark and a fetish for high heels. How far will rebellion take her? The temptations of Loulou and Theo are never predictable. This skips along with spirit and heart.

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*Minding Frankie*

MINDING FRANKIE BY MAEVE BINCHY, ORION, $35.

Poor little Frankie! Her plucky mum, Stella, is unlikely to survive childbirth and wants to leave her in the care of her dad, Noel, a recovering alcoholic.

It’s not ideal, but when you are a resident of St Jarlath’s Crescent, Dublin, there’s no need to fret – you’ll always be surrounded by love and support. Cheerful Father Flynn leads a long list of friendly locals who are always there to help, young doctor Declan Carroll is kind and sensitive, and cousin Emily from America is an organisational whirlwind with a solution for every problem. The only threat to this community is the charmless Moira, a social worker who seems hell-bent on separating Frankie from her father. Minding Frankie is the perfect accompaniment to tea, toast and a doona. It’s warm, satisfying and comforting.

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