**The Times and Sunday Times Books of the Year 2020**
‘This biography is truly wonderful – a masterclass in storytelling’
Sunday Times
‘A continuously astonishing and ultimately moving account of a unique figure, the stuff of great literature’ Simon Callow, THE SUNDAY TIMES
‘Gripping . . . jaw-dropping story, brilliantly told’ Ysenda Maxtone Graham, THE TIMES
‘The last book that made me cry . . . a really thorough and well-researched biography’ Lynda La Plante, Good Housekeeping
‘The most extraordinary, rackety life’ William Boyd, DAILY TELEGRAPH
‘Richly anecdotal and oddly captivating’ Miranda Seymour, FINANCIAL TIMES
‘At the end of the book the reader can only say, “Whew! What a story!”‘ Anne de Courcy, SPECTATOR
‘Hugo Vickers’s life of Gladys Marlborough is an extraordinary and tragic story, with special resonance today’ EVENING STANDARD
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One of the most beautiful and brilliant women of her time, Gladys Deacon dazzled and puzzled the glittering social circles in which she moved.
Born in Paris to American parents in 1881, Gladys emerged from a traumatic childhood – her father having shot her mother’s lover dead when Gladys was only eleven – to captivate and inspire some of the greatest literary and artistic names of the Belle Epoque. Marcel Proust wrote of her, ‘I never saw a girl with such beauty, such magnificent intelligence, such goodness and charm.’ Berenson considered marrying her, Rodin and Monet befriended her, Boldini painted her and Epstein sculpted her. She inspired love from diverse Dukes and Princes, and the interest of women such as the Comtesse Greffulhe and Gertrude Stein.
In 1921, when Gladys was forty, she achieved the wish she had held since the age of fourteen to marry the 9th Duke of Marlborough, then freshly divorced from fellow American Consuelo Vanderbilt. Gladys’s circle now included Lady Ottoline Morrell, Lytton Strachey and Winston Churchill, who described her as ‘a strange, glittering being’. But life at Blenheim was not a success: when the Duke evicted her in 1933, the only remaining signs of Gladys were two sphinxes bearing her features on the west terraces and mysterious blue eyes in the grand portico. She became a recluse, and the wax injections she’d had to straighten her nose when she was 22 had by now ravaged her beauty. Gladys was to spend her last years in the psycho-geriatric ward of a mental hospital, where she was discovered by a young Hugo Vickers.
Intrigued and compelled to unmask the truth of her mysterious life, Vickers visited her over the course of two years, eventually publishing Gladys, Duchess of Marlborough, a biography of her life – and his first book – in 1979, two years after Gladys’s death. Forty years on, Vickers has now completely rewritten and revised his original biography, updating it with previously unavailable material and drawing on his own personal research all over Europe and America.
He once asked Gladys, ‘Where is Gladys Deacon?’ She answered him slowly, ‘Gladys Deacon? . . . She never existed.’ The Sphinx is a fascinating portrait of this elusive but brilliant woman who was at the centre of a now bygone era of wealth and privilege – and a tribute to one of the brightest stars of her age.
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Reviews
A continuously astonishing and ultimately moving account of a unique figure, the stuff of great literature
'Gripping . . . jaw-dropping story, brilliantly told'
'Hugo Vickers's life of Gladys Marlborough is an extraordinary and tragic story, with special resonance today'
'At the end of the book the reader can only say, "Whew! What a story!"'
'A fascinating glimpse of a lost world and a highly unusual woman at large, and ultimately adrift, in it'
'Vickers is admirably sympathetic while at the same time collecting every detail of his subject's transgressions and eccentricities'
'The last book that made me cry . . . a really thorough and well-researched biography'
'Posterity and history owe Vickers a serious debt . . . To read about [Gladys] now is to be readmitted to the salons of Paris before the Great War, to the luxurious villas of Italy, and to the London season of the Edwardians . . . thus another piece of history's jigsaw has been found and preserved'
'The most extraordinary, rackety life'
'A truly wonderful read'
'Fascinating and very well written'
'A jaw-dropping biography . . . scandal, misery and madness marked the life of this society beauty'