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Heirs and Graces

A History of the Modern British Aristocracy

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Heirs and Graces

By: Eleanor Doughty
Narrated by: Florence Howard
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

The fascinating new history of the British Aristocracy since the Second World War


There are fewer than 5000 people who can genuinely claim to be members of the British aristocracy, and yet they loom large in the popular consciousness. We're fascinated by their houses and estates, their lives and loves, their foibles and eccentricities. And we entertain the strong suspicion that, while they may be fellow citizens, they are very far from being People Like Us.

In Heirs and Graces Eleanor Doughty draws on her unparalleled access to a bewildering range of dukes, duchesses, earls and others to create a vivid picture of who they are and how they tick. En route she traces their progress from a post-war era when they and their like were described by one future Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer as 'selfish, depraved, dissolute and decadent' to their diverse current roles as guardians of vast ancestral mansions, farmers, financiers and much else beside. She looks at key rites of passage, from cradle, via boarding school to grave. And she tells stories of their ups and downs, and of the doings of the heroes and villains who fill their ranks.

The result is a wonderfully rich, often amusing, always revealing account of the fortunes of the aristocracy over the past century and a series of fascinating glimpses into what it is like to be an aristocrat in Britain today.

'A deeply researched and highly entertaining account' - Julian Fellowes, creator of Downtown Abbey

'This well-written, well-researched and fascinating book could not be better timed.' -
Lord (Andrew) Roberts, author of Salisbury: Victorian Titan


© Eleanor Doughty 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Anthropology Europe Great Britain Social Classes & Economic Disparity Sociology War

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Critic reviews

Meticulously researched. An interesting account of the Aristocracy which I thoroughly recommend (Lady Glenconner)
All stars
Most relevant
Very informative and well worth a listen. Good narration, easy to listen too. Wish it could have been longer.

Fascinating

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Good book with some excellent anecdotes and nuggets, if a bit blandly read but Anna-chronistic? Gordons-Town? Alexander of Tune-IZZ? WHY-cumists? So avoidable with either a wiser choice of narrator who might just know these things, or failing that, a bit of research. One would have thought, given the subject matter and likely readership, that accuracy in these things would have been more highly prized.

So many mispronunciations

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This book is not written by an intelligent woman. Certainly, it has a lot of stories, facts and figures; but they are all spewed out in a never ending account of this and that, which all so bewilders the listener that in the end nothing is revealed or remembered.

Rambling

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As another reviewer pointed out, the narrator has obviously not done a single bit of research, She mispronounced a large number of the names in the book. It wasn't just the occasional name, but the majority of both family names and place names. If I were the author I would be livid at this dreadful performance of an otherwisde very well-written book.

Full of incorrect pronunciations. Dreadul narrator

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