Decca, Jessica Mitford
Decca, Jessica Mitford
List: $33.00 | Sale: $23.10
Club: $16.50

Decca
The Letters of Jessica Mitford

Author: Jessica Mitford, Peter Y. Sussman

Narrator: Alistair Petrie, Lucy Scott

Unabridged: 30 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/17/2026

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

A new edition of the letters of the most remarkable of the Mitford sisters--timed to a new streaming series about the ever-fascinating family and a new biography of Jessica coming in 2025.

Born into the British aristocracy as one of the famous (and sometimes infamous) larger-than-life Mitford sisters, Jessica "Decca" Mitford ran away to Spain during the Spanish Civil War with her cousin Esmond Romilly, Winston Churchill’s nephew, then came to America, became a tireless political activist and a member of the Communist Party, and embarked on a brilliant career as a memoirist and muckraking journalist (her funeral-industry exposé, The American Way of Death, became an instant classic). She was a celebrated wit, a charmer, and throughout her life a prolific and passionate writer of letters—now gathered here.

Decca’s correspondence crackles with irreverent humor and mischief, and with acute insight into human behavior (and misbehavior) that attests to her generous experience of the worlds of politics, the arts, journalism, publishing, and high and low society. Here is correspondence with everyone from Katharine Graham, Betty Friedan, Miss Manners, Julie Andrews, Maya Angelou, Harry Truman, and Hillary Rodham Clinton to Decca’s sisters the Duchess of Devonshire and the novelist Nancy Mitford, her parents, her husbands, her children, and her grandchildren.

*Includes a downloadable PDF containing footnotes

About The Author

Jessica Mitford is also the author of Hons and Rebels (previously published as Daughters and Rebels), The American Way of Death, The Trial of Dr. Spock, Kind and Usual Punishment, A Fine Old Conflict, Poison Penmanship, Faces of Philip: A Memoir of Philip Toynbee, Grace Had an English Heart, and The American Way of Birth. Until her death in 1996, she lived in Oakland, California, with her husband, labor lawyer Robert Treuhaft.About the Editor: Peter Y. Sussman was an award-winning editor at the San Francisco Chronicle from 1964 to 1993 and has written, edited, taught, and lectured widely since then. He lives in Berkeley, California.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Nigeyb on October 15, 2013

Like many, I am fascinated by the Mitford sisters. Books-wise, so far, I have only read "Hons and Rebels" by Jessica Mitford. Having read "Hons and Rebels" I was interested to find out more about her. Perhaps a 700 page plus book of her letters, and that covers her entire life, was a bit too ambitio......more

Goodreads review by Carl on August 21, 2012

"Compilations of correspondence are necessarily biographies of a kind—biographies of individual consciousness with less intrusive mediation and interpretation than one finds in a traditional biography," Peter Y. Sussman, editor of "Decca: The Letters of Jessica Mitford" writes. But what constitutes......more

Goodreads review by Steve on December 20, 2017

Jessica Mitford was an inspired writer: biting without being bitchy, polemical without being preachy, and satirical without being snide. She also had an amazing life, which she chronicled in two autobiographies. The first of them (Hons and Rebels) is still one of the funniest books I've ever read. (......more

Goodreads review by Nigeyb on November 02, 2013

Books-wise, so far, I have only read "Hons and Rebels" by Jessica Mitford, and, earlier this week, Highland Fling, my first Nancy Mitford. Having read "Hons and Rebels" I was interested to find out more about Jessica Mitford. Perhaps a 700 page plus book of her letters, and that covers her entire lif......more


Quotes

“[Her] letters are so full of comic set pieces, vivid narrative, and wonderfully replicated speech . . . that one wonders why Mitford never tried writing a novel. . . . Decca is a smashing accumulation. . . . A week with her letters makes everybody else seem a bore.”
The New Yorker

“The letters are a treasure. Decca lived and battled by a pen that was as graceful and witty as it was sharp. Teeth were her means of propulsion, her wings; and the marks they left were singularly fine and even to be prized. She was, consummately, a happy warrior.”
The New York Times

“On every page of this enormous volume, she is right there — funny, smart, swinging hard, fiercely uncompromising. . . . Throughout her life, Decca laughs . . . at the quirks and prejudices of the rich or racist. . . . A superb collection.”
The Washington Post

“Of all the storied Mitfords, Jessica was the renegade, eloping at nineteen and becoming an activist. Decca captures history’s most charming muckraker.”
Vogue

“Decca’s constant public exposure meant that she knew just about everyone worth knowing. She was involved, directly or indirectly, with some of the twentieth century’s most momentous events, from the rise of Nazism through the Spanish Civil War to the civil rights movement. . . . She was a devoted correspondent, with a wide circle of friends, a mischievous sense of fun, and a vast appetite for life.”
The New Republic

“The letters, which are equipped with first-rate footnotes, are excellently readable for a number of reasons. For one thing they contain a fiercely engaged person’s descriptions of social injustice, especially racial inequality, in the United States, primarily from the 1950s to the mid-1960s . . . As such these letters are exemplary historical documents. But they are also wonderfully entertaining expressions of what one might call sheer joie de lettres, that exhilarating delight that comes from going at a letter full tilt.”
The Boston Globe

“Sussman is a sublime editor of one of the funniest, most enthralling and gloriously honest collections of contemporary letters I have yet read.. . . Decca’s sense of humour flows through her correspondence as brightly and dangerously as a fencer’s rapier. Here is a book to be savoured and revisited: impure and undiluted pleasure, from start to finish.”
—Miranda Seymour, Sunday Times (London)

“Quite delicious. . . . These letters are a treat: not so much a collection of correspondence as an extended conversation on which the reader is invited to eavesdrop. . . . As an example of what a woman can do once she has rid herself of, or at least decided to ignore, the expectations of others – family, men, society – Jessica Mitford will always take some beating. That she is also a hoot is merely the icing on the cake.”
The Observer (UK)

“[It’s] impossible not to be drawn in by Decca’s spiky charm and disarming curiosity. . . . [In] a world that seems to grow ever more homogenized, it is refreshing to encounter a one-of-a-kind character . . . [Who] among us doesn’t nurture a feisty inner imp, intent on having the last laugh?”
Slate

“No doubt about it: Jessica Mitford had one hell of a life . . . And yet by far the most interesting thing about Decca, as in anything written by any one of the six Mitford sisters, is her voice.”
The Independent (UK)