Finalist for the Desmond Elliott Prize
A "superb debut"* novel--based on the story of the author's
grandmother--following an aristocratic woman who abandons her family and
her money in search of a life she can claim as her own. (*The
Guardian)
Enid Campbell, granddaughter of a duke, grew up surrounded by servants,
wanting for nothing except love. But when her brother died in the First
World War, a new heir was needed, and it was up to Enid to provide it.
A troubled marriage and three children soon followed. Broken by
postpartum depression, overwhelmed by motherhood and a loveless
marriage, Enid made the shocking decision to abandon her family, thereby
starting a chain of events--a kidnap, a court case, and selling her son
to her sister for £500--that reverberated through the generations.
Interweaving one significant day in 1964, when it seems the family will
reunite for one last time, with a decade during the interwar period, A
Perfect Explanation explores the perils of aristocratic privilege,
where inheritance is everything and happiness is hard won.