I usually quite like Laura Thompson’s work but I’m afraid this perspective on Nancy Mitford really left me a bit cold. There was an interesting life to be conveyed here, but one enormous Achille’s heel put me off it. Thompson seemed utterly obsessed with linking back to Nancy’s characters in The Pursuit of Love and Love in a Cold Climate. Of course it is imperative that the reader knows that her two most important books are Roman a Clefs ‘through a looking glass’, and her characters are often thinly veiled family members and friends. But Nancy herself was not the most frank or honest person (in the way that Diana, her sister, was), and so the constant comparing ends up muddying the picture of Nancy. It ended up feeling, perhaps wrongly, that Thompson was doing this just to make herself seem a bit clever. Consequently the biographer’s voice came across more loudly than the subject’s, which is never a good thing, for me.
I’ve read much more enlightening books about or including Nancy. Perhaps chief amongst these is Selina Hasting’s biography. Also excellent are Nancy’s published letters, edited by Charlotte Mosley (as a part of “Letters Between Six Sisters”, and “Mary S Lovell’s almost peerless book on the Mitford Sisters in the round “Take Six Sisters.”