A Mansion of Her Own

The Mysterious Life of Heiress Alice DeLamar
by Nona Footz, Audrey Clare Farley
$32.50


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This item is on Preorder, with an expected delivery date of October 06, 2026

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For fans of Vanderbilt and The Last Castle, a riveting biography of the reclusive heiress who became a fairy godmother to twentieth-century artists while intently guarding her own secrets.

"A journey through the bedrooms and drawing rooms of the twentieth-century art world where luminaries expressed forbidden sexual desires and found inspiration...

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Published By Grand Central Publishing

Format Hardback

Number Of Pages 272

Publication Date 10/06/2026

ISBN 9781538772072

Dimensions 5.5 inches x 8.25 inches


“Nona Footz’s A Mansion of Her Own is simply marvelous. Deftly combining three genres – biography, mystery, and autobiography – Footz introduces us to the unforgettable heiress and art benefactor Alice DeLamar; discloses in tantalizing nuggets DeLamar’s many buried secrets; and wrestles with her own conclusions as she struggles to pry those secrets away from Alice’s mischievous friends. All of that would be satisfying enough, but Footz gives us more. Her book is also a journey through the bedrooms and drawing rooms of the twentieth-century art world where luminaries expressed forbidden sexual desires and found inspiration for much of the art they created. The book is so good, I picked it up and barely breathed until I was finished.”

Mary Gabriel, author of Ninth Street Women

“History has a way of sidelining even the most fascinating women, but Nona Footz refuses to let Alice Delamar remain in the shadows. Through exhaustive research, Footz resurrects a woman who was eccentric, fiercely generous, and entirely her own — a lesbian heiress who poured her fortune into the arts at a time when society simply wanted her to find a husband and settle down. A Mansion of Her Own is impeccably researched and a rollicking good time. Footz’s storytelling is a welcome reminder that women have always been far more interesting than they’ve been given credit for.”

Deb Miller Landau, Author of A Devil Went Down to Georgia: Race, Power, Privilege, and the Murder of Lita McClinton

 
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