The Pursuit of Love, novel written by the English author Nancy Mitford (1904–1973), published in 1945.
The Pursuit of Love and its sequel, Love in a Cold Climate, are thinly disguised autobiographical novels based on Mitford’s life and her outlandish upper-class family. The narrator is sensible, realistic Fanny, who watches with bemused detachment at the antics of her seven Radlett cousins, dominated by the horrifying and often hilarious Uncle Matthew (modeled on Mitford’s father, Lord Redesdale, infamous in his time for his support of pro-Nazi political groups in Britain before World War II).
Mitford used actual people and events as fodder for her books, often to their detriment: as she wrote in her novel, “The great advantage of living in a large family is that early lesson of life’s essential unfairness.” Like the Radletts, the real-life Freeman-Mitford children had their own secret language and wacky sense of humor. They called themselves “Hons” and held meetings in the “Hons Cupboard.” Jessica (fictionalized as Jassy) saved money to run away; Lord Redesdale had an “entrenching tool” that he had used in World War I against the Germans, killing eight soldiers with it as they attempted to flee from their dugout; and, like Lady Redesdale, Aunt Sadie held eccentric beliefs about diet and health. Nancy’s alter-ego is the lovely Linda, whose tragic affair with Fabrice parallels her own ill-fated romance with French colonel Gaston Palewski (to whom the book is dedicated).
In part because her family was so well known, mostly for indiscretions such as sister Unity’s devotion to Adolf Hitler and sister Diana’s marriage to the British fascist leader Oswald Mosley, Mitford found immediate success with The Pursuit of Love. The novel sold 200,000 copies in its first year of publication, so that, as she put it, “I sat under a shower of gold.” Perhaps to escape the shadow of those negative familial associations, Mitford spent much of her later life living in France.
Mitford’s autobiographical novels have stood the test of time, entertaining several generations of readers. Their continued popularity is due, in part, to three television adaptations. The first, in 1980, starred Judi Dench as Aunt Sadie; it was revived 20 years later with Alan Bates in the role of Uncle Matthew, and again in 2021, with Lily James, Emily Beecham, and Dominic West in leading roles.
The Pursuit of Love, whose title was suggested to Mitford by longtime friend Evelyn Waugh, is a gently satirical look at a most unusual set of people, and at the lifestyle of the privileged classes between the two world wars. Love in a Cold Climate is equally enjoyable, as is the memoir of younger sister Jessica, Hons and Rebels.