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The Bolter

Frances Osborne

Idina Sackville - the 1920 s style icon and seductress said to have inspired Taylor Swift s The Bolter

Barcode 9781844084807
Paperback

Original price £10.95 - Original price £10.95
Original price
£10.95
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Release Date: 29/12/2008

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Biography
Label: Virago Press Ltd
Language: English
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group

Idina Sackville - the 1920 s style icon and seductress said to have inspired Taylor Swift s The Bolter
* 'This is a truly astonishing book. Frances Osborne has not just brought to life a dizzyingly rich and scandalous slice of social history, she has produced a tragic and deeply moving tale as well. It is far more gripping than any novel I have read for years' Antony Beevor
On Friday 25th May, 1934, a forty-one-year-old woman walked into the lobby of Claridge's Hotel to meet the nineteen-year-old son whose face she did not know. Fifteen years earlier, as the First World War ended, Idina Sackville shocked high society by leaving his multimillionaire father to run off to Africa with a near penniless man. An inspiration for Nancy Mitford's character The Bolter, painted by William Orpen, and photographed by Cecil Beaton, Sackville went on to divorce a total of five times, yet died with a picture of her first love by her bed. Her struggle to reinvent her life with each new marriage left one husband murdered and branded her the 'high priestess' of White Mischief's bed-hopping Happy Valley in Kenya. Sackville's life was so scandalous that it was kept a secret from her great-granddaughter Frances Osborne. Now, Osborne tells the moving tale of betrayal and heartbreak behind Sackville's road to scandal and return, painting a dazzling portrait of high society in the early twentieth century.