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Reviews

Hons and Rebels by Jessica Mitford

missymouse's review against another edition

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I'm obsessed with the Mitfords, so i'd been saving this book for sometime. I loved it, Jessica writes her story like it was a novel. It was wonderful and made me love her even more. An absolutely necessary read for any Mitford fan!

angelagm's review against another edition

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funny

4.75

cordelialeigh's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful reflective medium-paced

4.0

metamole's review against another edition

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5.0

I read this book in my teens and then and then again on my late 20s. Both times it was a joy. It is a book about another age, but remains funny, poignant and thoroughly worthy of its reputation as a modern classic

theslozat's review against another edition

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adventurous funny reflective medium-paced

4.0

emilybishton's review against another edition

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funny informative

graceduncan's review against another edition

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emotional informative reflective medium-paced

3.75

veethorn's review against another edition

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5.0

Easily the best book I’ve read in a long time. Irresistibly funny, self-deprecating and interesting, takes almost nothing seriously except prejudice and anti-fascism, and Mitford sketches her characters so easily that I’m desperately jealous. What an autobiography.

kate_in_a_book's review against another edition

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4.0

This is Jessica, or Decca’s, memoir of the first portion of her life. She recounts her childhood, her political awakening and her relationship with Esmond Romilly. I laughed, I cried, I shook my head often in disbelief.

As she admits, her childhood was unconventional. They were old-fashioned upper-class toffs, distantly related to royalty and less distantly to Winston Churchill. Jessica and her five sisters received no formal education (though their brother was sent away to school). They instead enjoyed a series of private tutors whom they teased and tortured. This meant they reached adulthood in a state that was both wordly and hugely naive and sheltered. Perhaps this explains the extreme political allegiances of at least three Mitford sisters.

Jessica acknowledges early on that readers may recognise some of the events she covers from her sister Nancy’s thinly veiled autobiographical novel The Pursuit of Love. She deals with this in what could be a humorous offhand comment, or could be a savage swipe, depending on how you read it. As someone who has indeed read The Pursuit of Love and The Mitford Girls, I did know the bare bones of Jessica’s story, but that’s no replacement for hearing it in her own words, with the details she feels to be important.

Her words are, unavoidably, those of someone born into tremendous privilege. The “jolly hockey sticks” tone oozes from the earlier pages. It is almost comedic the number of false starts that Jessica has in breaking away from her family’s right-wing politics to pursue her own left-wing ideals. Adult Jessica is certainly a socialist, and that choice cuts her off from the bulk of her family’s money, but she still has plenty of rich family and friends to visit.

Read my full review: https://www.noseinabook.co.uk/2020/05/15/invisible-boundaries-kept-me-boxed-in-from-the-real-life-of-other-people-going-on-all-around/

nim_me's review against another edition

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4.0

I know very little about the mitford sisters but since reading love in a cold climate have been keen to find out more about them.
Written by Jessica it assumes familiarity with the sisters and with the role in society and I felt occasionally that I was missing things.

It is absolutely full of scandal, although I got the feeling that the biggest scandal for Jessia was her privaledged upbringing, these are the stories told with the most outrage. Her running away to spain and eloping are told so matter of factly it is easy to forget the scandal that would have ensued at the time.



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