I received "The Assassination of the Archduke" as a paperback yesterday and started reading it immediately. Having read and browsed all of it, I must report that I'm somewhat disappointed by this book, which I had looked immensely forward to because of this thread. Primarily the fault is my own, as I had gotten the impression, evidently a misconception, from the discussion in this thread, that the book dealt in detail with the family's relationship with Bohemia as their "homeland", since the book describes how they felt Konopischt was their true home. Instead it focuses on and only slightly elaborates or corrects the well-known facts about the couple, their assassination and their children, so that it feels in many ways as just a popularized English-language version of Wladimir Aichelburg's German-language biographies of FF.
Tellingly the book has interesting information about FF and Sophie's good relations with King George V and Queen Mary of the UK, but next to no information about their relationship with their Czech subjects, which after all holds the key as to why the Hohenberg children were exiled and deprived of their inheritance. Great comedic entertainment value lies in the book's tale of Senior Court Chamberlain Montenuovo's many petty and insulting intrigues against FF's morganatic spouse. One can actually well understand how Sophie kept calm about this, because it was too ridiculous to take seriously. Elevating herself above petty accusations of "debasing the All-Highest Arch-House" must have been even easier when she considered the scandalous and downright shocking behaviour of many (male) Habsburgs and all the other mental and behavioral problems in the family that stemmed from forced marriages and inbreeding.
Really "debasing" was the anecdote where it was revealed how FF and his cousin Elisabeth (Princess of Windisch-Graetz) quarreled about their alloted seaside holiday time at Miramar castle in Trieste, like it was a family timeshare flat!