Frances Burney, known as Fanny and Anne Louise Germaine Necker were born
in England and France respectively in the mid- eighteenth century.
Although their upbringings were very different they shared two things -
love and respect for their fathers who influenced their future careers
and a passion for recording their feelings and opinions in journals and
diaries. Young ladies of the time were not generally encouraged to have
opinions, much less to write them down, but Fanny Burney and Madame
Germaine de Staël persevered and went on to write numerous novels, plays
and journals. Through their letters and diaries they recorded major
events in European history; Fanny's time spent at the court of King
George III and Queen Charlotte, and Germaine's experiences in Paris
during the horrors of the French Revolution. Love blossoming in later
life, marriages, children, family gossip and romantic liaisons are all
recorded in Passion, Wit and Politics, a fascinating account of the
lives of two remarkable women.