THE plot could have been inspired by Evelyn Waugh's Vile Bodies, but
unlike Waugh's novel - which parodies the era of the 'Bright Young
Things' - The Mistress of Mayfair is a real-life story of scandal,
greed, corruption and promiscuity at the heart of 1920s and '30s high
society, focusing on the wily, wilful socialite Doris Delevingne and her
doomed relationship with the gossip columnist Valentine Browne, Viscount
Castlerosse. Marrying each other in pursuit of the finer things in life,
their unlikely union was tempestuous from the off, rocked by affairs
(with a whole host of society figures, including Cecil Beaton, Diana
Mitford and Winston Churchill, to name but a few) on both sides, and
eventually degenerated into one of London's bitterest, and most talked
about, divorce battles.In The Mistress of Mayfair, Lyndsy Spence follows
the rise and fall of their relationship, exploring their decadent
society lives in revelatory detail and offering new insight into some of
the mid-twentieth century's most prominent figures.