Troublemaker The fierce, unruly life of Jessica Mitford

Carla Kaplan

Book - 2025

"This biography of Jessica Mitford, fifth of the six famous Mitford Girls, tells the wild and unlikely story of a British aristocrat who became an American Communist, bringing her astonishing self-transformation to life with a riveting, often hilarious, account of trading wealth and status for a life of radical activism. Who could predict that a British aristocrat would so energize American antiwar and civil rights struggles that Time magazine would crown her "Queen of the Muckrakers"? Jessica Mitford, fifth of the six famous "Mitford Girls," was brought up by an eccentric English family to marry well and reproduce her wealth and privilege, not to advocate for the less advantaged. Her five beautiful sisters have bee...n subjects of books and movies dedicated to their naughty, glamorous lives. Jessica-known as Decca-ran away to America to forge a wilder rebel's life. As this richly researched book details, Decca broke the Mitford mold-fighting fascism in the Spanish Civil War, becoming an American Communist and pioneering witty, wildly popular journalism, including her blockbuster The American Way of Death, placing her at the heart of social justice battles. Decca relentlessly injected laughter into her politics, encouraging the activists she influenced to do likewise. From famed baby doctor Benjamin Spock to best friend Maya Angelou, her anti-authoritarian irreverence had a profound impact on American culture. Mining extensive, untapped sources, Kaplan's passionate biography of an unlikely life demonstrates that Decca's social empathy was hard-won and self-taught, a model with particular relevance today and a powerful, modern example of female adventure and freedom"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Harper [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Carla Kaplan (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780061578946
9780061578922
  • Introduction. God careth for us
  • Prelude. The gooey parts
  • The feudal remnant and the fem
  • That dread place
  • It will all be terrific fun
  • Let's go to America
  • America is such heaven
  • A prolonged dull... ache
  • A concrete upper lip
  • The new life
  • A serious person
  • A terrific hater
  • A most un-duchessy life
  • Going home again
  • Action man
  • The making of a muckraker
  • Do something
  • Do admit
  • A bit of a black cloud
  • Writing about the dead
  • Toddling towards the end.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Rebel daughter. Based on dozens of interviews and abundant archival sources, scholar and author Kaplan's book offers a perceptive, sympathetic biography of activist, unabashed communist, and muckraker Jessica Mitford (1917-1996). Jessica, known as Decca, was defiant even as a child--unlike her sisters Nancy, who became a well-known novelist; Nazi sympathizers Diana and Unity; Deborah, who married a duke; and Pamela, who retreated to the countryside. Growing up, the Mitford girls formed a "savage little tribe," overseen by nannies they exuberantly terrorized. Their parents "called everything outside of their home 'Elsewhere' and pronounced themselves against it." Critical of privilege, Decca kept a "running-away" bank account, which she used to join her second cousin, Esmond Romilly, a nephew of Winston Churchill, to fight fascists in Spain. She was 21 when they married. Never having lived on her own, she did not know how to cook, clean, or even wash her underwear. Nevertheless, she took on challenges with charm, optimism, and a "stubborn embrace of difficulty, contradictions, and mess." And there were many difficulties: Her first child died of measles; Esmond, a Royal Canadian Air Force pilot, was shot down during World War II; a son was hit by a truck and died. But Decca rallied. After Esmond's death, she got a job in Washington, D.C., at the Office of Price Administration, where she showed a talent for "in-depth research, joy in exposing corruption, [and] delight in involving collaborators," all of which she used to great effect in her first book, a bestselling exposé of the funeral business,The American Way of Death. Her second husband was a Jewish lawyer from the Bronx, as committed an activist as she was. Kaplan captures Decca's energy and verve, her complicated relationship with her aristocratic family, and her unwavering devotion to fighting injustice, racism, and inequality. A brisk, engaging biography. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.