The New York Times bestselling author of the acclaimed Resistance
Quartet returns with the incredible story of Mussolini's daughter, Edda,
one of the most influential women in 1930s Italy and a powerful
proponent of the fascist movement.
Edda Mussolini was the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini's oldest and
favorite child. At 19, she was married to Count Galleazzo Ciano, Il
Duce's Minister for Foreign Affairs during the 1930s, the most turbulent
decade in Italy's fascist history. In the years preceding World War II,
Edda ruled over Italy's aristocratic families and the cultured and
middle classes while selling Fascism on the international stage. How a
young woman wielded such control is the heart of Caroline Moore's
fascinating history. The issues that emerge reveal not only a great deal
about the power of fascism, but also the ease with which dictatorship so
easily took hold in a country weakened by war and a continent mired in
chaos and desperate for peace.
Drawing on a wealth of archival material, some newly released, along
with memoirs and personal papers, Mussolini's Daughter paints a
portrait of a woman in her twenties whose sheer force of character and
ruthless narcissism helped impose a brutal and vulgar movement on a
pliable and complicit society. Yet as Moorehead shows, not even Edda's
colossal willpower, her scheming, nor her father's avowed love could
save her husband from Mussolini's brutal vengeance.
As she did in her Resistance Quartet, Moorehead delves deep into the
past, exploring what fascism felt like to those living under it, how it
blossomed and grew, and how fascists and aristocrats joined forces to
pursue ten years of extravagance, amorality, and excessive
luxury--greed, excess, and ambition that set the world on fire. The
result is a powerful portrait of a young woman who played a key role in
one of the most terrifying and violent periods in human history.