The Mitfords

by: Charlotte Mosley, editor

Published by: HarperCollins

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Reviewed by Connie Anderson

I had never heard of the Mitfords until a few years ago an Englishman (now American citizen) hired me to write his memoirs of WWII. His sister visited from England and told me about how Unity Mitford went to her boarding school. When asked who Unity Mitford was, she said, “You don’t know the Mitford girls?

Well, I do now! This collection of letters between the six Mitford girls is an outstanding record of their history spanning 80 years from 1925.

In 1935 Unity met and became enamored with Hitler. The letters never indicated any romance, but she went to many major events with him. On September 3, 1939 when Britain and France declare war on Germany, Unity tried to take her life. She failed, causing brain damage. She died in 1948 at age 33.

Nancy, the oldest, was born in 1904, Deborah the youngest in 1920. The book has photos, a short bio and family tree. The other sisters are Pamela, Unity and Jessica. Their brother Tom, who was sent to boarding school at age 8, died in WWII.

These six English women were from an aristocratic family–but some became Nazi sympathizers, one an avowed Communist, others a novelist, poultry farmer and duchess. You follow them through their naïve youth to their adult involvements–as daughters, wives, widows, mothers (happy and grieving) and aging women.

The letters (edited by Diane’s daughter-in-law Charlotte) were printed using all the pet names and code words they used, but once you get reading it becomes easy. The many footnotes were invaluable and historical.

Diana (1910-2003) married Sir Oswald Mosley, with Hitler present at the reception at Goebbel’s home. They had had a long affair, and kept this marriage secret, too. Mosley formed the British Union of Fascists. In 1941, the British imprisoned Mosley and Diana for their activities–holding them over three years. By this time, they had four sons (two from Diana’s earlier marriage) who were taken care of by the other the Mitford sisters.

In 1941, Unity wrote Diana at prison that sums up the Mitfords: “When I first came back, I thought all this was a play, and I was looking on. Now I know I have a part to play, and I can’t bear acting it.”

Armchair Interviews says: A superb collection of letters that take you as an observer before, during and beyond WWII. You’ll never ask: “Who are the Mitford girls?”

From our armchair to yours...

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