Margot at War

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What to expect

Margot Asquith was perhaps the most daring and unconventional Prime Minister's wife in British history. Known for her wit, style and habit of speaking her mind, she transformed 10 Downing Street into a glittering social and intellectual salon. Yet her last five years at Number 10 were a period of intense emotional and political turmoil in her private and public life.

In 1912, when Anne de Courcy's book opens, rumblings of discontent and cries for social reform were encroaching on all sides - from suffragettes, striking workers and Irish nationalists. Against this background of a government beset with troubles, the Prime Minister fell desperately in love with his daughter's best friend, Venetia Stanley; to complicate matters, so did his Private Secretary. Margot's relationship with her husband was already bedevilled by her stepdaughter's jealous, almost incestuous adoration of her father. The outbreak of the First World War only heightened these swirling tensions within Downing Street.

Drawing on unpublished material from personal papers and diaries, Anne de Courcy vividly recreates this extraordinary time when the Prime Minister's residence was run like an English country house, with socialising taking precedence over politics, love letters written in the cabinet room and gossip and state secrets exchanged over the bridge table.

By 1916, when Asquith was forced out of office, everything had changed. For the country as a whole, for those in power, for a whole stratum of society, but especially for the Asquiths and their circle, it was the end of an era. Life inside Downing Street would never be the same again.

Read by Patricia Gallimore

(p) 2015 Isis Publishing Ltd

Critics Review

  • This is a plot that Downton Abbey would die for! … Anne de Courcy keeps this steaming, erotic merry-go-round whirling with admirable skill.

    DAILY MAIL
  • Margot Asquith’s sharp humour, modern style, intelligence and wealth fascinated men… Anne de Courcy has a firm grasp of politics, an acute eye for social detail and a keen perception of Margot’s pains and pleasures. Her narrative is concise and compelling.

    THE TIMES
  • De Courcy, author of the celebrated The Fishing Fleet: Husband Hunting in the Raj, indulges us with generous quotes from contemporary correspondence and detailed observation, describing life at a time of turbulent change through engaging anecdotes and descriptions

    SUNDAY EXPRESS
  • A proper sex in high places scandal… Though Margot Asquith, nee Tennant, is its main character, her husband’s scandalous obsession with young Venetia Stanley is inevitably centre stage

    THE INDEPENDENT 'Books of the Year'
  • A superb evocation of an extraordinary time

    CHOICE Book of the Month
  • Fascinating … Anne de Courcy is sympathetic to her subject. She’s a journalist with a keen eye for detail and no-nonsense directness

    THE TABLET

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