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Muv: The Story of the Mitford Girls' Mother

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Expected 3 Mar 26
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The story of the "seventh Mitford woman," a long-overlooked figure in the Mitford canon—told in full for the first time.

Everyone knows about the six flamboyant Mitford girls but in fact there were seven remarkable women in the famous family—the seventh was "Muv," Lady Sydney Redesdale, the mother of the notorious sisters. Too often portrayed as different from them and outside the girl gang, she was really the original and much of her daughters’ strong will, self-confidence, and extremism came from her.

Sydney Redesdale was a divisive figure both among her daughters and subsequent biographers. Until their deaths, her girls were still squabbling over what she was really like, their differing views of her persisted for even longer than the political divides between them. Each daughter wanted to control the narrative and they wrote competing novels, memoirs and letters to vindicate their perspective. For Nancy and Jessica, she was a scapegoat. For Unity, Diana, Debo and Pam, she was a saint.

Biographers have been equally divided about how she should be portrayed. Many wondered how such exceptional children could spring from such ordinary parents, but was Sydney really so "ordinary?" The story of her life at the heart of one of Britain’s most famous families is told in full here for the first time and is a missing piece in understanding one of the twentieth century's most complex and fascinating families.

272 pages, Kindle Edition

Expected publication March 3, 2026

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Rachel Trethewey

16 books43 followers

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Nicole Birkhold.
44 reviews
November 2, 2025
For anyone with interest in the Mitford girls, this is a must read. I patiently await “Farve”!
116 reviews
February 8, 2026
The infamous Mitford Girls have had numerous outings, both in fiction and non-fiction, but this is the first biography dedicated to their mother, Lady Redesdale (born Sydney Bowles) and it helps to fill in the background to the extraordinary chequered lives of her infamous six daughters.

The book’s cover shows “Muv”, as she was called by her family, as a young woman. There is much to be gleaned from the haughtiness of that image; this was not a woman to be messed with, someone who had fixed ideas about social behaviour and, as it turns out, was uncompromising, hypercritical and rigid in her political opinions. In turn, one learns about her father, Thomas Bowles, a man of his own convictions, self-made, successful and also a “maverick”, and the greatest influence on her life.

Muv married the eccentric David Freeman-Mitford (“Farve”), who later inherited the baronage of Redesdale, and they had six daughters and just one son. The couple were parodied by three of their daughters in a number of famous novels but they also created controversy through their support of fascism in Europe, and a close connection to Adolf Hitler.

For anyone who has read extensively about the Mitford Girls, much of this will already be familiar territory, but it is interesting to observe the dynamics of a family that clashed violently with one another over a range of extremist views, be it racism, antisemitism, communism, or fascism.

Although there were estrangements, it is extraordinary to see how Muv did her best to juggle her unruly family. Unity – whom she looked after for several years after a failed suicide attempt - is perhaps the most tragic figure. Given the full name of Unity Valkyrie Mitford and conceived at a place called Swastika, Ontario, Canada, it seems she was doomed by some bizarre fate to be linked to Hitler!

Muv isn’t likeable, and her unwavering support of Hitler, her views on “ugly” Jews and poor people can make one wince. One might even think of her as stupid when she simply refused to ever have her mind changed by events, even the deaths of two of her children linked to the Second World War. As the author states:

“Sydney was not stupid; it was her judgement not her intelligence which was at fault. Her obstinate refusal to reassess situations in the light of incontrovertible evidence, alongside her entrenched prejudices and her misguided loyalty, made her hold onto pernicious attitudes which had proved catastrophic on both a global and personal scale. As so often in her life, she only saw what she wanted to see and tightly shut her eyes to anything which might contradict her worldview.”

A most intriguing woman, and a book definitely recommended for anyone with a curiosity about who influenced the Mitford Girls and made them into such memorable figures.

(My only quibble is the naming inconsistency in the narrative, with paragraphs calling her Muv in one sentence, Sydney in the next, and Lady Redesdale in the following.)

https://www.marinamaxwellauthor.com/b...
Profile Image for Susan.
3,041 reviews569 followers
Review of advance copy
January 24, 2026
Lady Sydney Redesdale, formerly Sydney Bowles, was the mother of the Mitford brood. I would say Mitford girls, but there was one son, who sadly died in WWII. Married to David Mitford, they had a large family: Nancy, Pamela, Thomas, Diana, Unity, Jessica (Decca), and Deborah.

Nancy was, of course, a famous novelist, while Diana and Unity were infamous supporters of the Nazi party, and Jessica was a communist. With Oswald Mosley as a son-in-law, interned during the war with Diana, and Unity shooting herself when England and Germany went to war, Sydney became all too familiar with notoriety. Even after reading this biography, I am still unsure whether Sydney was a committed fascist herself or whether she just tended to go with whatever was easiest to keep the peace. She seemed able to have tea with Hitler one minute, then applaud Jessica's efforts to support Civil Rights the next and claim she liked everyone she met. She certainly had some outlandish ideas about vaccinations, about education and politics.

Whatever the real truth, it is fair to say that Muv kept some poor company and made some poor choices. Still, this was a really interesting look at the matriarchal figure of the Mitford clan and her often difficult family relationships.
Profile Image for Davida Chazan.
806 reviews120 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
February 19, 2026
This is another "out of my comfort zone" books. It is a biography, and non-fiction - so, Brava to me! Now, why pick this biography? Because I know quite a bit about the Mitford Girls and their very unusual lives, but none of the biographical, historical fiction books about them seem to include all that much about their mother. So, I was curious to learn more about the woman who raised them. Well, it was fascinating.

My full review can be found here. https://tcl-bookreviews.com/2026/02/1...
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
537 reviews10 followers
December 26, 2025
As the famous "Mother of the Mitford sisters" Sydney had quite a bit to live up to. This is a straight old-school biography, might have worked better as narrative non fiction. I skipped the last couple of chapters, since I was not fully engaged, just too many citations and "...as her granddaughter-in-law described her..." passages
Profile Image for Gemma.
42 reviews
September 2, 2025
A fantastic portrayal of a very unique and complicated women. The writer gives an honest and yet sympathetic account of her life and family. A wonderful read.
Profile Image for Clare McHugh.
Author 4 books222 followers
October 3, 2025
Fascinating! Full of new details about the famous Mitford family. One feels sorry for "Muv" at times, at other times one is angry at her, but she's brought alive on the page, and it's wonderful to read about historical events via Muv's letters and decisions.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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