My 2021 hardback copy has the very fetching pink and blueish cover and not the one pictured, I bought it after listening to the author giving a zoom talk.
Well the book turned out to be not quite what I expected, but interesting nevertheless! I thought I would be reading a book about the life of Mary Davies, who was born during the year of the plague in 1665 and was betrothed to be married when she was 7 and her husband to be was 10. Needless to say the marriage didn't take place, only because the groom's father couldn't afford her dowry and only wanted the two families to come together because he was after Mary's inheritance. She did marry later and had several children but was widowed whilst still young so she goes off on a european tour with her priest (from a catholic family which was still controversial at that time), and wakes up one morning to find a man in her bed and she was rapidly married. She was then hastily returned to London where her lawyers spent several years trying to extricate her from the supposed marriage. Their arguments were based on Mary being of unsound mind, the book speculates whether she was suffering from a breakdown, or breakdowns, or was bipolar. As this wasn't proved it is speculation.
The book revolves mainly around the properties Mary had inherited, in fact she owned most of Westminster and tons more land beyond that as well. This land was then sold off in sections and that's where the great squares of London were built with amazing grand houses surrounding them. It also goes on to give us a in depth round up of everything which revolves around land buying, property building, property selling, property owning, and this makes up most of the book. I only took an interest in this section because Mary was of the Grosvenor family and my family are Grosvenors too. We obviously got the short straw and dropped down to peasants! But I did learn that Grosvenor was actually Gros Venour, or great huntsman, and the family probably came over with William the conqueror, they are at least showing up in land records about half a century later, and a couple of centuries later they show up about 30 or so miles from where my Grosvenors were living! Bit of family history there folks!!
As for poor Mary? She vanished out of public sight and her eldest son became sole owner of all the estates and properties and land owned by Mary due to her unsound mind, yet letters found in the archives suggest that she appeared to be very much of sound mind. But she was a fallen woman in those times, and her children and family seemed to have had very little to do with her.